2—The Daily Collegian Thursday, April 21, 1983 Parking By TONY PHYRILLAS Collegian Staff Writer The Downtown Improvement District Committee is recommending the State College Municipal Council levy a special tax on downtown businesses to help finance the proposed Fraser Street parking garage. The committee, appointed by the council last year to consider alternative ways to finance the proposed garage, made its latest recommendation at a meeting last week. The ad hoc committee composed of municipal officials, property owners and local businessmen unanimously approved the recommendation to tax downtown businesses. The committee is chaired by State College Mayor Arnold Addison. The council is scheduled to consider the committee's recommendation at its May 2 meeting. A previous recommendation made by the committee to levy higher taxes on businesses closest to the Pugh and proposed Fraser Street garages was dropped after Municipal Solicitor Robdt K. Kistler told the council that taxing by proximity is illegal. Although the committee believes it has finished its work now that the latest recommendation has been made, it could conduct • additional meetings if the council wants other financing proposals to be dis cussed, Municipal Manager Carl B. Fairbanks said. The committee's recommendation calls for tax reve nue of $65,000 to be collected from downtown businesses each year for five years to help finance the $3.3 million garage project. The tax would be levied based on the assessed value of a particular commercial property in the downtown business district, Fairbanks said. "The committee believes the business community would accept the taxing proposal," Fairbanks said. The downtown business district includes 469 parcels between Atherton and Hetzel streets and between College and Beaver avenues, that would fall under the tax, Finance Director Ronald A. Davis said. The owner of each parcel a section of land that has a single owner but may have several businesses on it would be responsible for paying the tax, Davis said. The average assessment per business would fall between $2OO and $5OO each year, Davis said. The Sheraton Penn State, 240 S. Pugh St., would be assessed Dear Scott, Steve and Doug: Last night a Phi Psi saved my life! Was it you? Get psyched for the Phi Psi! Love, the ALA's U 154•. CollEgE OF SCIENCE STUdENT COUNCIL is holdiNg OFFICER ELECTIONS 7:00 p.m. Apßit 21, 1983 324 HUB COME qiET TOUR VOTE IN! R• 055 Expo wilt bE discussEd garage: Committee suggests business tax the most money $2,859 under the taxing plan Each of about 240 residential condominiums in the business district would be assessed $25 a year. Owner occupied residential properties would not be affected by the tax. The Committee is also recommending that parking rates in the Pugh Street garage and for on-street meters be raised as part of the garage's financing program. Rates in the Pugh Street garage would increase from 25 to 35 Tents per hour, while metered parking would increase from 25 to 30 cents per hour. The increased rates could take effect before the end of summer, Fairbanks said. The borough expects a $109,000 profit from parking operations in 1983, but a deficit in financing the new garage is still projected for at least the first five years, Fairbanks said. The $65,000 raised by the tax would go to cover that deficit. The special business tax could decrease during the five-year period depending on the size of the deficit and the tax would be dropped when the garage breaks even, Fairbanks said. Although the committee unanimously recommended the taxing plan, downtown land owners could appeal the tax if the council passes it. Landowners would have 30 days after the council passes the tax to file a petition in court opposing the tax. However, under state law, a successful court challenge of the tax would require opposition of the tax by 51 percent of the owners of downtown property. The four-level garage to be Wilt in the 100 block of South Fraser Street, on an existing off-street municipal parking lot would accommodate 322 cars. Commer cial space would be reserved on the ground level of the garage. The financing committee had discussed two alterna tive proposals: • The borough could sell a $3.3 million bond issue to area business people at 7.2 percent instead of offering it to an investment firm at 9.5 percent. • The borough could enter into a lease-back agreement with a Pittsburgh-based group. The group would build the garage under the borough's supervision and would lease the garage back to the borough. ********************* EXPLORE KINKO'S* )rtl Penn Towers) *********"*"*-****"*"** or-*-104444.*444. 0 1c4 0 1e4.*4****-1e444 Fenn Sta eailing MEETING THURSDAY, APRIL 21 7:30 p.M. 109 BOUCkE ElEcTioNs FOR OfficEßs will bE hdd SPRING WEEK FESTIVAL HAPPY HOURS all week 11 a.m. - 2 a.m. Pitchers of Mixed Drinks Insight 'B3 examines careers for business students' future By LISA CARLSON Collegian Staff Writer University alumni representing companies including Kodak, Mellon Bank and American Bell; are sched uled to speak today about business career opportunities during Insight 'B3. Insight 'B3, formerly known as Ca reer Day, is sponsored by the College of Business Adminstration Student Council in cooperation with the Col lege of Business Administration. Event chairman Greg Pautler said the alumni will participate on panels, consisting of three or four representa tives of companies from each major area of the College of Business Ad ministration. "All the speakers are University alumni, and we had to try for a cross section of specific companies and male and female representatives," said Pautler, also chairman of the student council. "We feel we came up with a good cross-section of people whose companies regularly recruit from the University." Each panelist will talk for about 10 to 15 minutes about his field and his specific day-to-day job responsibili ties, he said The speakers will also touch on hints for job hunting, interviewing and what to expect in the real world, Pautler said. Eleven of the 31 speakers are mem bers of the Board of the College of Business Administration at the Uni versity. Pautler said many of these board members are presidents of corporations or entrepreneurs. "They bring first-hand experience with them and they are familiar with the curriculu'm here and can suggest classes that would be the most help ful," Pautler said. The speakers are of various age /. Corner of College & Allen "A Good Place To Be!" • ENN STATE 121: Wa-hingion II (' Charlnite k lsille 12/ ./ • Mar Issbur, • copies tationary .r•stamps binding passport photos * .*** *****-*"*"* V:1 IA r groups and positions. They range from corporation presidents with years of experience to 1982 University graduates who are completing their first year on the job. The program will consist of three identical one-hour afternoon sessions at 1, 2:15 and 3:30. Each session will consist of eight different panel dis cussions held simultaneously in va rious areas of the HUB. The panels, their meeting places and representatives are: . • Business Logistics in 225 HUB with Jay Best, vice president of'Kop pers.Co.; .Phillip Hillen, senior trans portation adviser with the U.S. Army; Noreen Wasserman, distribu tion analysist for M & M Mars Inc., and Susan Palumbo, materials hand ling manager for American Hospital Supply. • Economics in 320 HUB with Mi chael Dooley, assistant director of the Federal Reserve System; Richard Karfunkle; president of Econoviews International, and Richard Marean, sales estimator of Eastman Kodak. • Finance in 305 HUB with John Beyer, president of Mid-State Bank; J. Earl, Epstein; attorney with the firm of Epstein, Beller and Shapiro; Robert Szeyller, co-manager of Penn sylvania Finance Group, Inc., and Edward Wilson, account executive with Kidder, Peabody and Co. • Management in 307 HUB with Edward Anchel, president of Sparko matic Corp.; Paul Asplundh, senior vice president of Asplundh Tree Ex pert Co.; Robert Klein, chairman of the board of Alliance Wall Corp., and Ralph Peters, president BENATEC Associates. o Marketing in 301 HUB with Rob ert Ascah, account executive of American Bell; Thomas Erickson, sales representative with NRC Corp.; James Meister, marketing manager Pi Phi spirits are aiming high for victory in the Phi Psi! U 54 Every Thursday is Thissity litunsdoy at Pedro's FREE SOFT DRINK with purchase of $1 .50 or more l Open: i t z I . I Mon-Thurs Fri Sat Sun for ALCOA, and Jack Udell, vice president of Pyramid Chemical Sales. • Private Accounting in the HUB Gallery lounge with Joseph Bellas, general auditor for Joy Manufactur ing Co.; Susan Lower, accountant for PPG Industries; Mary Ann Miller, partner and CPA with Joseph Tarica ni Co.; and Roseann Sieminski, Uni versity financial officer. • Public Accounting in the HUB Assembly Room with Carol Coates, auditor for Coopers and Lybrand; Barry Faigen, senior auditor for Touche Ross and Co.; Arthur Ram icone, auditor for Deloitte, Haskins and Sells, and Debra Yanosich, ac countant with Arthur Anderson and Company. • • Quantative Business Analysis in 323 HUB with Paul Hernandz-Cuebas, branch manager of Wang Labs; Deb orah Jackson, operations analysist for Mello - xi Bank; Curtis Marlatt, program analyist for Allegheny In ternational Industries, and Katherine Mucka, program• analyist for Air Products and Chemicals Inc. The name of today's program was changed .to Insight 'B3 for two rea sons, Pautler said. First, the council wanted to get away from the high school notion of a career day and make it .more professional with a program format. Also, the council wants students to gain insight into the realities of the business world, he said. Co-chairman Lori Lindenberg said those who have not chosen a major may benefit from the discussions. Students can also learn what a first job can be like. After the panel discussions, an open house will be held from. 4:30 to 5:15 in 301 HUB during which all the speak ers will be available to answer any questions students may have. Phone for takeout 234-4725 131 S. Garner. St. 11am•12mid Ilam•2:3oam noon•l2mid Schroeder favors ERA's economics By MARCIA McGRATH Collegian Staff Writer The women's movement has made considerable progress since the Revolutionary War and chang ing attitudes in the 'Bos are furthering the cause even more, U.S. Rep. Patricia Schroeder, D-Colo., said Tuesday. "Every time this country has been in trouble, the women have said, 'We'll do whatever it takes,' " Schroeder said. Schroeder, the first speaker in the Claster Lec ture Series; which promotes the development of women in central Pennsylvania, traced the evolu tion of women's equality from Mary Goddard who risked • a charge of treason and death by publishing the Declaration of Independence when many of her male counterparts refused to print it to the Suffragettes who fought for women's right to vote. Schroeder said her mother had difficulty accept ing the fact she attended Harvard Law School and Schroeder admitted that when she was in college, no woman even dreamed of serving in the House of Representatives. Schrcteder told a story of a 5-year-old girl she met in the early '7os who said she wanted to become a citizen of the Soviet Union. Schroeder said she thought the remark was odd and upon investigation learned that the girl knew that, at the time, only the USSR had female astronauts. Therefore, the girl concluded that to fulfill her dream of becoming an astronaut she must be a Soviet. "I see the 'Bos as very different than the '6os and '7os," she said. "I see women across all socio economic lines coming together and saying 'wait a minute = the Equal Rights Amendment is an economic issue.' " "One woman in 10 will get through life deciding whcther she wants to work," Schroeder said. "Women were once told they could have a career or marriage, not both. Now the economy demands both." She added that if the present trend continues, the heads of all .households classified as poverty level will be female by the year 2000. Schroeder said she is encouraged because, for the first time, women are reflecting different An Evening With ARTHUR WASKOW One of the prominent voices in contemporary Ju l daism. Editor of Menorah, a monthly journal of Jewish renewal April 21, 1983 7:30 pm Eisenhower Chapel Frizzel Room Sponsored by THE OFFICE OF RELIGIOUS AFFAIRS and B' NAI B' RITH HILLEL FOUNDATION Attention Business Students: Tired Of Book Knowledge" Don't Miss: FINANCE r. .1 MANAGEMENT M. PING MARKETING MARK. BA BA QBA • BABA G . c tbk.) fIC I * • . BUSH` NC CS • I S NOMI FINANCE463E FINANCE H GEMENT M ENT MANAGE kRKETING MA NG MARKETIN A QBA QBA QBA QBA QBA QP. r TING swt i tzIIC A S CC B O I.. IY S MILS ECONOMICS ECON' 'ONCE FINANCE FINAL' MANAGEMENT Sponsored By: The College Of Business Administration Gain some "On The Job Experience" Corporate Representatives speak on the Realities Of Business Careers. THURSDAY, APRIL 21 IN THE HUB FORMERLY "CAREER DAY" 0040 Wisdom is the ability to discover alternatives. attitudes in the polls .than men, and civil rights groups, women's caucuses and men are working together for passage of the ERA. This type of pressure has enabled the ERA to be reintroduced to the House and has paved the way for an Economic Equity Act now before the House that would provide equality for women in such areas as insurance, pensions, inheritances and business expenses. Schroeder was critical of ERA opponents be cause/they say it would require unisex bathrooms and women to be drafted, neither of which are true; she said. The effect of these unfounded fears, she said, was that women lost ground on advances in economic issues. She said she believes the reason President Rea gan shows only mild concern about women's issues is that each woman he knows is the one of every 10 Rep. Patricia Schrgeder who do not have to work so he truly believes no women have to work. Schroeder said that although she was not raised in the traditional sense that only prepared her for motherhood, she had many inner conflicts when she won the House seat no one predicted she could. Six months later, after moving to Washington with her husband and her 2- and 6-year-old chil dren, Schroeder and her husband discussed the silliness of their fears about moving. She said their lifestyle is not how Good Housekeeping would depict the average home, but she thinks it works better than most. Several people have questioned her ability to raise a family while working, but Schroeder said, "Caring about your family is not just making sure they have homemade jellies; it might be better to worry about acid rain and buy the jelly in the store." Photo by Melodee D. Snoke Ambassadors host tours at Old Main open house today By KAREN NAGLE Collegian Staff Writer It is formidable, blanketed by mystique, and in , the heart of cam pus. From within come'decisions which have significant effects on students' lives. Some' students glance at its walls and wonder what occurs inside. Now is the chance to chip away some of this aura surrounding Old Main and discover what is behind those decisions and statements affecting so many students. An Old Main Open House will be hosted by the Penn State Lion Athbassadors from 9:30 a.m. to 3:30 p.m. today. Visitors will be guided by a Lion Ambassador through various ad ministrative offices, be introduced to administrators and their func tions, said Susan Sullivan, chair woman of the Open House. Offices to' be toured are: the Alumni Association, Gifts and En dowments, the Provost, Adminis tration, Governmental Affairs, Undergracluate Studies, Public In formation . and Relations, Com monwealth Campus System, Planning and Budget, Business and Development. Sullivan said administrators in these offices will be available to meet with visitors. University President John W. Oswald's office will not be open for the tour. Tours will begin every 10 min utes in Old Main's foyer, where visitors can view murals depicting the history of the University. The Daily Collegian Thursday, April 21, 1983-3 Tours will conclude with a visit to Old Main's bell tower, which will be open until 4:30 p.m. The Lion Ambassadors, is spon sored by the Alumni Association and the Office of Gifts and Endow ments to promote the interests of Penn State through recruitment, public relations and special events, Sullivan said. By hosting the open house, she said they hope to give students a better under standing of what goes on inside Old Main. "We feel we are helping to bridge the gap between students and the administration, and are taking some of the mystique out of walking into Old Main," Sullivan said. Kevin Murphy, president of the Lion Ambassadors, said students need a better understanding of administrator's functions. For instance, Murphy said, most students have heard of Provost Edward D. Eddy, but few know what functions a provost per forms. "I think the better that students understand that, •the better these offices can serve them," he said. The administrators have been very encouraging in their support of the Old Main Open House, Mur phy said. Also, visitors are welcome to walk through Old Main any time from 8 a.m. to 5 p.m. A survey taken a few years ago found near ly half of the students thought they were not allowed to walk through Old Main, he said.