opinions editorial opinion Playing politics with people's lives All the people of Lock Haven have ever asked for is a way of supporting their families, putting food on their tables and making a living. To do that, many, worked at the two nearby chemical companies, Drake Chemical Co. and American Color & Chemi cal. Now many of these people are looking for a way to just keep on'living. Faced in recent years with a terrifying onslaught of health problems including birth defects, respiratory ailments, skin rashes and high rates of bladder cancer the people of Lock Haven are scared. And they want answers. They want to know why they and their children are sick. They want to know what’s going to be done and who’s going to pay for it. They want to know how the chemical Beta-napthylamine (BNA), which was man ufactured at the Drake site from 1947 to 1962 and which is also linked often to bladder cancer has affected their lives. And they deserve to have their questions answered. State'Rep. Russell Letterman, D-Centre County, is one legislator Who is trying hard to see that the people of Lock Haven are treated fairly, but it hasn’t been easy. Letterman and state Sen. J. Doyle Cor man, R-Centre County, have been working together to bring the State Department of Health to Lock Haven to conduct prelimi nary health screenings. Last week, they met with a temporary setback when Gov. Dick Thornburgh “blue lined” an amendment to an $B2 million deficiency spending bill, which would have provided $120,000 to begin the preliminary health screening of 2,000 former employees of Drake and nearby residents. Thornburgh gave three reasons for delet ing the amendment: the lack of evidence that diojcin exists at Lock Haven; the possi- The bus stops here The story is old but the. University keeps changing the players and the scenes just to keep it interesting. One chapter in this epic was written in the summer of 1979. While most of the student population was away on summer break, the University quietly raised the cost of a Cam pus Loop ride 150 percent. No students were consulted about the change. Ridership facts were withheld from students as they tried to determine if the increase was fair. After the students performed their own ridership survey and found that the rate increase was not entirely justified, they negotiated a decrease in fees charged for term passes and more free evening hours. What the University thought would be a small inconvenience for a few students who rode the loop was turned into an embarrass ment for University officials by planned and cohesive student action. The University should have learned the students have a voice and that voice de serves to be heard, if for no other reason than to avoid embarrassment. However, last week, Vice President for Business Ralph E. Zilly announced that the Campus Loop would not operate this sum mer because fewer students are on campus and a larger deficit exists between fares and operating costs. The fact that the loop is not running is not Limit to Congressional terms needed In keeping with the recent rash of pro posed amendments to the Constitution, I would like to suggest one more: An amend ment to limit the number of consecutive terms a person could serve in the U.S. House of Representatives or the U.S. Senate. The Constitution is full of such amendments whose purposes are to protect us from human nature. Our founders devel oped a system of checks and balances to curb the inherent and unceasing desire of those in government to aquire more power. So should the inherent tendency of Ameri can voters to endlessly re-elect their rep resentatives be constrained. And I use that term, representatives, loosely. bility that the Centers for Disease Control would perform the screening; and the fact that the money would have to be spent by June 30, the end of the fiscal year. But Letterman thinks the governor had other, motives for holding back funding for the health screenings. In Monday’s issue of The Daily Collegian, Letterman said he was against the proposed tax increase in Thornburgh’s budget. Thornburgh, Letterman said, needs “at least 25 Democrats” to pass his budget in the house. The governor, Letterman be lieves, was trying to gain his vote in ex change for health screening funds. But Letterman didn’t need to compromise his vote to obtain the health screenings. On Tuesday, state Secretary of Health, Dr. H. Arnold Muller, said that based on a review of cancer incidents in the area, the health department would indeed fund pre liminary health screenings for former chemical company workers and residents within two blocks of the now-closed Drake and AC&C companies. And Letterman told the Collegian yester day that he was assured that if .further testing is needed, supplemental appropria tions would be made. That was one quick turnaround on the governor’s part. Last week, he said no to funding the health screenings; this week, he said yes. What made Thornburgh change his mind over the span of about a weekend is left to speculation. For, while it is good that the people of Lock HaVen are finally getting the health screenings they so desperately need, the politicking that apparently went on before the governor’s latest decision was distressing. It may have been a pretty tricky way to play politics, but it was a pretty lousy way to deal with people’s lives. that tragic. If it is already operating under a deficit and ridership greatly decreases in the summer, then concessions must be made to ensure that a complete schedule is put into effect for the fall, when University enrollment is at its peak. But how does the University know that ridership would so greatly decrease this summer as to warrant a complete shut down of the Loop? Some sort of trial period could have been set up to determine whether ridership would decrease this much. An unusually large number of students are attending the Uni versity this summer. A trial period would give the students the chance to be heard and might show that the University was right in cutting loop service. Granted, the Campus Loop will probably not be missed by a majority of the people attending the University this summer. But the fact remains that the people who are attending the University pay to go here and deserve the same services as those who will attend in Fall and Spring Semesters. At the very least, they should have had the opportunity to prove that they would not have supported summer service from the Loop. That way, the administration could have kept another chapter out of a book that is already too long. Does a legislator, after 20 years or more, hundreds or thousands of miles away in Washington, D.C., still represent his or her district or state? After living in the metro politan area of Washington for the majority of his life and sending his children to that area’s schools, does he remember his con stituents’ needs? Such a situation compares favorably with the British form of representation in which members of Parliament are not required to live in the district they represent. Is that true representation? Certainly not. Yet this is exactly what, in fact if not in law our system has become. De facto, because our lawmakers spend about 10 months of each year living in Washington, with the other two months of the year divided between needed vacations, junkets (legitimate or otherwise) and the district or state they once truly resided in. But Britain’s form of representation is not ours de jure because our lawmakers are required to maintain a full-time residence in the district or state that elected them. However, by maintaining that logic that an empty residence is a political qual ifier we see that the tens of thousands of Americans who own vacation homes in Florida should be allowed to vote in Florida elections as well as in their own. Congressional entrenchment in Washing ton epitomizes all of the evils associated with absentee, landlords. They make the laws for the rest of the country and for at least 10 months of the year they never have to face their neighbors at home who must live with those decisions. Despite this, most Americans re-elect their lawmakers in knee-jerk fashion. It seems to matter not if their representatives are convicted of crimes or are caught in sex scandals. Diminishing a lawmaker’s knowledge of his constituent’s needs and desires is not the only harm done to voters by such entrench ment (or being in a rut, if you will). It also punishes those constituents who elect differ ent representatives as their needs or candi dates change. And it rewards constituents who re-elect their legislators ad infinitum. In this way, residents of this district, by themselves, have no means of achieving a change in the behavior of Congress in a relatively short period of time. This is because the 30-year veteran of Congress IT'5 A BIRPi IT’S A PLANE... daily Collegian Thursday, June 23, 1983 Suzanne M. Cassidy Editor | 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. Board of Editors. — Editorial Editor: Marcy Mermel; News Editor: Rosa Eberly; Sports Editor: John Severance; Photo Editor: Thomas Swarr; Arts Editor: Ron Crow; Assistant Arts Editor: Ron Yeany; Campus Editor, Alecia Swasy; Town Editor: Mike Netherland; Copy Editors: Dana Buccilli, Tom Sakell; Weekly Collegian Managing reader opinion Tasteless I have worked in a field of medical research which involved the use of donor organs, and I must say, Mr. Hasselbring, that I found your col umn (June 17) about the search for organ donors to be tasteless and insensitive. I presume that you were trying to make the point that we should donate our vital organs after our own deaths so that others may live. I think that your time would have been better spent saying so, rather than on your attempt at humor and mockery. You see, there are some things that just aren’t funny., and human misery is one of them., The decision to donate all or part of your body to medical research or transplants is, of course, a personal one. For those who wish to be a ©1983 Collegian Inc. Judith Smith Business Manager voluntary anatomical donor, Penn sylvania does provide a donor card to be carried in the wallet. Practically speaking, this card is useless unless you conveniently have it with you when you die, and your next-of-kin give their written or verbal consent. So please, if you really want to Be a columnist! Don’t waste your summer. While other students are lying jn the sun and watching the world go by, you could be expressing your thoughts, observations and opin ions about Penn State, State Col lege and the world beyond. We need talented, dedicated stu dents to write columns for The Daily Collegian’s editorial page. This is your chance to have your from Podunk, Massachusetts has the politi cal power to nullify the efforts of a freshman reformer from State Colleger Pennsylvania. The idea that each district has one equal vote in Congress is dead in the face of decades of seniority. Currently, Congress is offering no an swers to the problems of seniority. As to congressional isolation, Sen. Howard Baker (R-Tennessee) argues that the solution is to return to shorter sessions. Closing Congress down for half the year would force them to return to their districts Today’s Congress can barely pass legis lation of emergency proportions (budget, social security) now, while working all year. And the lawmakers already abdicate their responsibilities by leaving the controversial issues to the unelected judges to decide. Shorter sessions would only further such undesireable behavior. The answer is to limit the number of consecutive two-year terms a representa tive and the number of consecutive six-year terms a senator may serve to three each. (I arrived at these numbers by assuming that after 18 years a senator is out of touch with his constituents and by maintaining the two- The Daily Collegian Thursday, June 23, 1983 IT’S A RECOVER^! Editor: Brian Bowers; Weekly Collegian Assistant Ma naging Editor: Lori Musser. Board of Managers Assistant Business Manager: Valerie Plame; Office Manager: Colleen Waters; Sales Manager: Terri Alvino; Layout Coordinator: Kimberly Fox; Creative Director: Lori Hitz; Marketing Manager: Beverly Sobel; National Ad Manager: Kimberly Fox. Letters Policy: The Dally Collegian encourages com ments on news coverage, editorial policy and University affairs. Letters should be typewritten, double-spaced, signed by no more than two people and not longer than 30 lines. Students’ letters should include the term, major and campus of the writer. Letters from alumni should include the major and year of graduation of the writer. All writers should provide their address and phone number for verification of the letter. The Collegian reserves the right to edit letters for length, and to reject letters if they are libelous or do not conform to standards of good taste. Because of the numbers of letters received, the Collegian cannot guarantee publica tion of all the letters it receives. Mail letters to: The Daily Collegian; 126 Carnegie Build ing; University Park, Pa. 16802. / “give the gift of life,” the best thing you can do to make sure that this will happen is to tell your family and your physician now. Margaret Copenhaver, graduate-in dividual and family studies June 21 work published on one of the most read pages in one of the nation’s top college newspapers. To do so, you’ll need an applica tion which can be picked up in the Collegian office, 126 Carnegie. Summer Session is short, so please submit your completed applica tion by Saturday, June'2s. Wouldn’t you rather have a col umn than a sunburn? thirds difference in the length of terms between senators and representatives.) . The argument against such a proposition is that we would only be punishing ourselves by throwing good men and women out of office. Then why do we limit the terms of our presidents and governors? Besides, just how many of our senators and representatives are so indispensable ? Those few individuals who are the best thing to hit Congress since paper shredders could be elected to other offices. Such a person could, for exanple, serve as a senator for 18 years, then as a represenative for one and a half terms, then as a senator for three more terms, then as governor for two terms and so on. What would be the effects of limiting consecutive terms? More people would par ticipate in our government. Campaigning would become more vigorous, causing rep resentatives to be elected on issues and not, from habit. Exceptionally qualified poli ticans would be elected from office to office (much the same way large corporations transfer employees from plant to plant) gaining more and more knowledge and experience instead of more and more se niority and power to the detriment of all. Andy Hasselbring is a University graduate student in history and a columnist for The Daily Collegian. 9 t ' \• , * CICCBR<£UJ 193 . me-. But first you have to apply, reader opinion A critique I have recently perused the 1982-83 issue of Kalliope and wish to go on record with a few comments. First, I wish it known that I sub mitted a short story and four poems to that publication and all were re jected. Seeing how well the staff of Kalliope is represented in this issue, I suppose I should have accepted the invitation to join the staff which Mr. Seinfelt, co-editor of Kalliope, extend ed to me in the fall. This is not to suggest that my work was rejected because of my decision not to join the staff. Such a suggestion would be unfair, and unbecoming. Besides, I am well aware that my work was rejected solely because of the ignorance of the people on the staff, or at least of the editors. It is to suggest, however, that had I been on the staff at least some of my material would certainly have been printed. As evidence to support this claim, I cite Mr. Seinfelt’s story, “Their First Disordered Combatting,” the print ing of which goes to show that a staff member of such a publication can get any sort of atrocity at all into its pages. The next time Mr. Seinfelt lives through a “sunless” day I hope he’ll have me along to witness such a miracle. I have a similar regard for A.L. Wallace’s, “The Life of Wound,” which is about as engaging as a game of “war,” even putting in the jokers. Compared to either of these blunders, my story, “The Second Baptism,” reads like Tolstoy. And alas, I fear I’ve just provided some housewife with an inspiration for a new modern poem. It could go something like: We spent all night at war Using jokers to make fifty-four fi' I I" Coupon Special I Expires ] 6/29/83 Cards in all. After a draw on queens, Which I lost, with aces in be tween. .. Well, you take it from there, dear. Perhaps you could go with, “I threw my cards at hubby’s face,/ thus scatt’ring them about the place.” But I’ll leave it up to you. So that it will not appear that my own critical faculties have become as ravaged as those of the Kalliopers by my indignation, let me say that I find some merit in Mr. Dellinger’s “Pana ma City By Night.” But over-all this piece is too much of a technical tour-de-force. Or rath er, too much of a tour with far, far too little force. My guess is that the piece was printed because its somewhat “exotic” content caught the fancy of the youthful Kalliopers. Ultimately, there is nothing the least bit interest ing, novel or moving brought to light. Where do I find merit then, you might ask; and indeed I should not move on without answering. I found Mr. Dellinger’s management of lan guage admirable, though it tends actually to work against him here, and I fully expect that he will be able to orchestrate language as well in the very near future. Let us keep our eyes peeled, as they say. As for Mr. Orlofsky’s, “Karama zim Will Wash Me,” I suspend crit icism since it is nearly as good as the story I submitted. Concerning the “poetry” in this Kalliope, consider me to be display ing the utmost restraint and defer ence when I say that I would rather listen to a bath being drawn than to have any of these things read aloud with me in earshot. The only bearable ones are Mr. Morris’s “Galatea” and Mr. Schultz’s “Smoking a Cheap Ci gar.” And these just barely. Each “poem,” each and every one Watch out for bikes! LEVI’S" KNITS CHEAP THRILLS has... 20% OFF _ (must present coupon LEVI’S® CLASSIC KNITS with purchase) including these two, is written in the New Yorker style; and I’m certain that every person who contributed “poetry” to Kalliope knows just what I mean when I say, “the New Yorker style.” This is the “poetry” of people who do not know that poetry is a matter of form; not of style, phenom enology, correlation. Form. This is the “poetry” of people for whom “poetry” is a hobby, like hook rugs or model airplanes; either of which ob jects would be more worthy of scruti ny than any of these “poems.” Perhaps it is well for the individual writers that such “poems” are writ ten. I will grant that much. But it is most unfortunate for the rest of us that they are circulated. They are vapid, lifeless works by mediocre dilletants and housewives. This means, of course, that they have a very broad base of appeal; thus the proliferation and virtual canonization of this style by the literary papers, which represents the most unfortu nate misunderstanding in all the an nals of literature. I provided Kalliope with an oppor tunity to display a more potent poet ry, hoping that since this was a non commercial venture they might sieze the opportunity. The poems I sub mitted are each cast in a form which I found to be.singularly suited to ex press the totality of the poetic event. They are not stuffed into a ready mold. Each one of them is far wor thier of publication than anything in Kalliope, but, of course, none of them were printed. Sign me Gary Fulcomer, though I submitted to Kalliope under the name Gary Evans, which is the name I will write under for now on. Gary Fulcomer, 9th-secondary edu cation and math May 22 BE A COLORFUL HIT IN A CLASSIC KNIT Levi's® Knits bring cool comlort to your active life. The beautiful colors, classic styling and easy-care fabrics are right for any occasion. Pull on a Levi's® Knit. ~ _ EVER GOES OUT Ol COOL OFF! ©1983 Domino’s Pizza Limited delivery area *\ m | Thursday Friday & Saturday Only , * t CA I C Thursday & Friday 9-10 * | SALt IiUUKO Saturday 9-5 * I H/OOFFSf ! I i i j -k * * 5; -k * | } | ALL WOMEN’S 799 It { Fashion Tops f » I j 1 T-SHIRTS by /199 I * Nike, Adidas, Donnay& More H * { » t iZZZ* 4 tr% OFF REGULAR % i Frisbee \\& PRICE | * ; ■* -k All J ! 20% OFF I *—- * * * i AA O / AC E“ SQUASH & RACQUETBALL * | 20/0 ON" RACQUETS } ■k * * . ®l ; 1 un » bom 1 -k Sat. 9 a.m.-5 p.m. Calder Way Two, State College J [ij |_[«J S | J Lady Diablo select colors only The Daily Collegian Thursday, June 23, 1983—9 4 FREE PEPSIS WITH ANY PIZZA one coupon per pizza exp. 6/28/83 North: 237-1414 1104 N. Atherton South: 234-5655 421 Rear E. Beaver Ave. Our drivers carry less than $lO I— K ; adidas *l* ROM Running Shoe