2—The Daily Collegian Friday, June 24, 1983 collegian notes • The Bicycle Division of the Penn State Outing Club will meet at 8 a.m. Sunday in the HUB parking lot for a 75-mile round trip bicycle tour to the Sinking Valley area. Participants are urged to bring a lunch. • The Central Pennsylvania Citi zens for Survival will hold a cham pagne buffet fund-raiser at 6 this evening at 953 Robin Road. Tickets police log • The State College Police Depart ment reported Wednesday that clothes belonging to Yvonne Rawl ings, 238 E. Beaver Ave., were miss ing from a laundry room in her apartment building. Police estimate the value of the missing items at $159. PennDOT The Pennsylvania Department of Transportation yes terday received bids for the Park Avenue extension of the State College bypass, a PennDOT official said. Joseph Walter, transportation system management coordinator for PennDOT, said the contract would be awarded within 30 days. However, a spokesman for the lowest bidder, Glenn 0. Hawbaker Inc. of State College, said the contract might be awarded within a week to allow contractors to start work as .soon as possible. This would ensure the scheduled Sept. Allegheny Women's Center • abortions • free pregnancy and related counseling Mon-Fri 9-5 Sat 10-4 Call collect 412-362-2920 THE / DELI I Fri & Sat Richard Sleigh Keister street are available at the door, Nittany News Book Shop, 108 W. College Ave., Dandelion Market, 304 S. Pugh St., and New Morning Cafe, 131 W. Bea ver Ave. • Traditional Services and Kid dush will be held at 9:30 Saturday morning at Hillel Foundation, 224 Locust Lane. Call 237-2408 for more information. • State College police reported Wednesday that a bicycle belonging to Thedy Hagenbuch, 1909 N. Oak Lane, was missing from outside Schlow Memorial Library, 100 E. Beaver Ave. Police estimate the va lue of the bicycle at $ll9. gets extension bids Serving Pepst-Cola 1,1984 completion date, The three lowest bids were from: Glenn O. Hawbaker Inc., $3,165,791.22; Herbert R. Imbt Inc., State College, $3,383,697.94; and Pavex Inc., Harrisburg, $3,635,596.85. The highest bidder was Hempt Bros., Inc., Camp Hill, $4,040,024.65. The Park Avenue Extension is the first part of a five phase project to close the State College bypass’s 2.06-mile “missing link.” It will connect Park Avenue with the bypass interchange at Centre Community Hospital. -Lori-Marie Vail HERITAGEQAKS DROPSRATES FOR *B3 PAY LESS RENT, GET MORE FEATURES Our 2&3-bedroom apartments are as much as $5O fess per month than last year. Hurry to reserve your apartment now, there is limited availability of certain styles and sizes. dghgj ERITAGE'OAK S dgjfe ’Ultimate Apartment Living 1 open 7 days 9-6 Mon-Fri 9-5 Sat 1-5 Sun PROFESSIONALLY MANAGED BY BENCHMARK REALTY INC. 10 VAIROBLVD. STATE COLLEGE 237-8201 • The Interlandia Folk Dance So ciety will meet and dance, from 7:30 to 11:30 tonight in the HUB Ballroom. o The State College Bicycling Club will meet at 9 a.m. Saturday at the Central Parklet on Fraser Street for a 50-mile bicycle ride to the Spruce Creek Warriors Mark Loop. Call Dick Mansfield at 238-2273 for more infor mation. • Michael Graci, 796 Cornwall Road, told University Police Services yesterday that his backpack was missing from his vehicle in Parking Lot 80. The backpack and contents are valued at $lOO, police said. $7.50 All seats reserved “I’ve never seen a Doc Watson I performance that was anything short of brilliant.” The Houston Post “Blind since birth, he weaves a thread of visions through the ageless mountain ballads.” Look Box office open weekdays, 9am-4pm beginning Tuesday, June 28. •This date is concurrent with the Central Pennsylvania Festival of the Arts. The Pennsylvania State University Artists Series / by Michael J. Vand Teachers use videodiscs to supplement courses By CHRIS STAMBOULIS Collegian Staff Writer Some faculty members at the Delaware County Campus of Penn State have been using videodiscs as an educational aid. Videodiscs, which are similar to record albums but have both audio and video recording capacities, have been used at the Delaware County Campus since February 1983, as part of its library network. Mary Matus, senior instruction service specialist at Delaware, said videodiscs are used in several classes, including political science, human development, and English composition courses Videodiscs are used primarily as supplementary components to courses, she said. Feedback, from both teachers and students who have used the videodiscs, has been positive, Matuls,added. Last Spring Term, the videodiscs were tested at the University’s Pennarama to see how well the discs would operate in the video system. Pennarama, the Pennsylvania Learning Network at University Park, is a cable television network ded icated to adult learning and is available for use by all educational institutions in Pennsylvania, said Jerry Sawyer, Pennarama coordinator. Sawyer said Pennarama had been operating in eastern Pennsylvania since 1980, and is scheduled for completion this summer. Sawyer said the testing was sponsored by the Nation al University Consortium (NUC), which has been conducting a four-month study on the use of videodiscs. LIKE YOUR BURGER CHAR-BROILED? - get yourself cornered. ! r&fe 7 a.m.-12 p.m. every day iEarner i TSSoom , College & Allen 237-3051 We welcome Master Card & Visa You wouldn’t go camping without a tent, show up at an exam without a No. 2 pencil, or go to registration without your bursar’s receipt, would you? And you wouldn’t dream of going to an interview without a resume prepared by Collegian Production, right? Unless, of course (check one): The choice is yours. But', before your life’s ambition and ex periences roll out of your old typewriter, check out your options at Collegian Production. Come browse through our resume portfolio. Imagine your name at the top of one of our many samples and think of how much bet ter you’ll feel about yourself with one of our resumes. Not to men tion how much better you’ll look. CP collegian I production Resume Service 126 Carnegie Building 10 a.m. to 4:30 p.m. or by appointment 863-3215 □ you choose not to be remembered for your initiative in having your resume professionally typeset and printed. □ you’d rather not have your resume stand out on a desk crowded with ordinary typewritten resumes, or □ your uncle happens to be president of the company that’s interviewing you. The NUC, in its third year of operation, is a national network of colleges and universities in partnership with public broadcasting stations and cable TV sys tems. Allam Herschfield, executive director of the NUC, said the study went very well, but that a complete report will not be ready for another month. Herschfield said the NUC was able to complete the study with the aid of the Maryland Center for Public Broadcasting, which developed a broadcasting quality signal for the discs. Pioneer Video, Inc. made video equipment available for the study, he said. Pioneer Video also mastered the discs, which is like mastering a record for further copying. Herschfield said the advantage of using the discs over video tapes is that they do not need to be stored in a climate-controlled area. Ralph France, executive producer for the Maryland Center for Public Broadcasting, said the study was conducted to explore the use of videodiscs as a medium for video software. The system now used in the broadcasting system requires that programs be fed by satellite to broadcast and then to cassettes, which costs, a great deal, he said. He added that the overall cost of using videodiscs in the satellite-television-casette relationship can be cost-effective. France said if enough discs are produced—about 200 the cost is equal or less than the cost Of three quarter-inch cassettes. Trustees approve 9 new scholarships, funds By PHIL GUTIS Collegian Staff Writer The University Board of Trustees recently approved several new schol arships and two special funds for University departments. The first fund, The Liberal Arts College Educational Advancement Fund, will provide money for a vari ety of needs and activities in the University’s College of The Liberal Arts. Money for the fund has been con tributed by faculty members, alumni, interested persons and organizations, according to information in the trust ee’s docket and news releases. “The fund has been established to provide for the .enrichment of under graduate students of high academic accomplishments,” said Stanley F. Paulson, dean of the college. “It will assist students engaged in activities, attending conferences and studying overseas. “The fund also will assist faculty members with the expenses that are sometimes required for research or presenting scholarly papers at meet ings,” the dean said. “With the reduc tion in other resources in the college, we consider this kind of assistance to students and faculty members to be of critical importance.” All uses of the fund will be ap proved by a committee appointed by GRE GMAT Speed Reading 15S^Ste/ni2ey-H §§ KnipyiN EDUCATIONAL CENTER One should learn to disAqREE withouT bECpiviiNq disAqREEAbU. the dean of the college. Expenditures for students will also be approved by the Office of Student Aid. The other fund, the Carolyn Wood Sherif Memorial Research Fund, will be used to provide grants for travel, special equipment, supplies and other purposes to graduate students doing research in social psychology or the psychology of women. Sherif, who died: last year, was a professor of psychology at the Uni versity. She joined the faculty in 1966 and wrote numerous .studies and 10 books. Her research involved work with adolescents and groups in large cities, social judgment, ego involve ment and the psychology of women. All graduate students in a program of research in the fields noted above who need financial assistance will be eligible for grants. A committee appointed by the head of the psychology department will approve expenditures. All awards will also be approved by the Office of Student Aid. The trustees also approved one award, the Teresa Cohen Mathemat ics Service Award. The award is in honor of Cohen, 91, a retired University professor emiri ta of mathematics. She joined the faculty in 1920 and officially retired in 1962, but continues to tutor students daily at her office on campus. The annual service award, which .ugt August 29 6:00 pm Oct. Call Days. Eves & Weekends Eleanor Coburn 444 East College Ave. State College, PA 16801 (814) 238-1423 TEST PREPARATION SPECIALISTS SINCE 1938 will recognize two faculty members in the Department of Mathematics, was created from gifts to the Univer sity in Cohen’s honor Recipients will be selected by the Policy Committee of the Department of Mathematics from nominations received from departmental faculty members at University Park and Commonwealth campuses and from current or former students. At their May 27 meeting, the trust ees also approved seven schol arships. They include: • The John W. and Rosanel O. Oswald Scholarship to provide finan cial assistance to medical students enrolled in the University’s College of Medicine at the Milton S. Hershey Medical Center. Oswald, the 13th president of the University, retires next Thursday. Students enrolled full-time in the College of Medicine who have a dem onstrated financial need will be eligi ble for the scholarship. Recipients will be selected by the assistant dean for student affairs in consultation with the dean of the College of Medi cine. The principal of the scholarship fund has been received as gifts from alumni, friends of the University and from professional fees from the medi cal center. • The Donald and Ruth Childs Memorial Renaissance Scholarship STONE VALLEY Hiking Trails Sailing Canoeing Fishing Picnicking Cabin and lodge rentals Shaver's Creek Nature Center Ride the Bus every Tuesday and Thursday from the front of Rec Hall at i 1:00,1:00,3:00, and 5:00. Round trip tickets are $3.00 for info. 238-5872. to provide financial assistance to outstanding undergraduates enrolled or planning to enroll, who need funds to meet their college expenses. Donald Childs is a University grad uate from the class of 1925. He earned his bachelor’s degree in commerce and finance. The principal of the scholarship fund will be received as a bequest from the Childs’, estate upon their death. Recipients of the scholarship will be selected by the Scholarship Selec tion Committee of the Renaissance Horizons planned for August The Horizons staff has begun to schedule events for its annual two-day festival which will be held Aug. 26 and 27. Horizons, an awareness program that gives on- and off-campus groups the opportunity to acquaint students with their organizations, has already received propo sals for more than 70 tables on the HUB lawn, said Chris Kelly, steering committee chairman. “We’re showcasing groups for the new students getting in,” Kelly said. Kelly (12th-computer science), said the committee has enough organizations participating, but is “work ing on scheduling other (musical) groups.” The Penn State Dance Band and Cartoon will per form on Friday on the HUB lawn, he said. Also, a STONE VALLEY RECREATION AREA The Pennsylvania. State University Come For The Fun 1 1 J l l U Fund with the approval of the Office of Student Aid. • The Samuel Thompson Pollock, Sr. Memorial Scholarship to attract outstanding students to Penn State. Pollock, who died in 1968, was a 1919 graduate in forestry. Money for the scholarship has been received as a bequest from the estate of his son, the late Samuel T. Pollock Jr. of Media, Pa., in the memory of his father. Recipients of the scholarship will be chosen by the Freshman Schol arship Committee and approved by feature band from New York, Do’a, will appear in the HUB ballroom Saturday night, Kelly said. “Various outside workshops with food are planned and demonstrations on the HUB lawn,” Kelly said. University Health Services will also sponsor tours and a blood-typing workshop will be sponsored by the Ritenour Health Center, Kelly said. The steering committee still needs volunteers to help plan the festival. Any persons interested in participat ing should contact John McCauley, the assistant direc tor of student activities and project advisor for Horizons. E - SeB - Ver m-w.Mw • Large selection of frames • One day service on most prescriptions • Low, reasonable prices • Repairs and adjustments • Ray-Ban Sunglasses in stock fSs*^e»« e a human comedy by Neil Simon June 16-19, 21-26, 28-July 3 The Pavilion Theatre Call (814) 865-1884 for tickets and information Curtain at 8:00, 7:30 on Sundays Located on the Penn State campus ''' **l"/' ' ' , ' *08“ r C ° U *f*o»* s . ox »e\e» \ • B« l fS \ •"■&•■• \ and ta : t«nde \ • & \ • lce Vvßuns ] u ,/■$ T by Sandy Wilson June 23-26, 28-July 3, 5-10 The Playhouse a musical spoof