opinions editorial opinion Looking for jobs Thanks to apparent philosophical differences, the University's Ad vanced Technology Center of Cen tral and Northern Pennsylvania will be hindered, in performing the job that it has been established to do: create jobs and contribute to the growth of the Commoriwealth's economy. , The Ben Franklin Partnership Challenge Grant Board . the board that approves the levels of state funding for four new ad vanced technology centers -- gave the University's center second year Eunding of $1.4 million, only 34 percent of the $4 million it had _requested. That amount is less than what the state's other three centers -- located in Philadelphia, Pitts :burgh and the Lehigh Valley received. The University's center will also receive about $2.5 million from cash pledges and commitments of in-kind services from private in dustry. Nevertheless, cuts in the :budget must be made, and some -proposed projects will have to be cancelled. Board chairman Walter H. Plosi la, deputy state secretary of corn •merce for technology and policy idevelopment, said at the board's :Aug. 11 meeting that the center's - . projects were not as likely to create 'lobs as the projects\ proposed by Other centers. But the, University's center :serving central and northern Penn =Sylvania encompasses an area larger and more diverse than the other centers and is the only one to include satellites, one serving the Harrisburg, Lancaster and York area and the other serving the Erie Houses of camaraderie By MATTHEW L. WOLFORD 1983 graduate• English Each spring, you start thinking. You still haven't *committed yourself to any living arrangement for next year. Spring terms end all too soon, and you know time's limited. You decide you want to join a fraternity _because every time you've visited one it had cold beer, hot girls, and funky tunes. The guys at house A are flesh-crawling prima don . has, but the guys at house B are peachy-keen and well ' fed. You'd like to join house B, but you're apprehensive • about the entire frat scene: rushing (you may not get a - .bid), pledging (you may not want a bid), and being a ,brother (all your friends will disown you if you accept a "bid). So, you wonder what you should do, and all you .can think about are the scenes from "Animal House." ;You decide fraternities are not for you, and you may be ' On the other hand, you may be wrong. The first thing to get straight in your mind is that fraternity parties l• and fraternity living are not the same thing. When the • .party's over, the house quiets down just like the "study lounge at the end of the hall, the room those five , guys are crammed into. I've found that the best way to look at fraternity living is as a cross between the dorms and the apart- Anents. At the house I lived in, I had the freedom of ,'"choice and mobility I had in my apartment, and the Camaraderie I enjoyed in the dorms. My food was :cooked for me, my dishes washed, my bathrooms "Cleaned. I had a free parking space. And as if that weren't enough, I was allowed to have a coffee-maker in my room. "Unheard of," you say; but it's true. I did sacrifice some of the peace and quiet of an apartment, -put not as much as I did when I lived in Geary Hall. I know it's hard, but if you're going to rush, try to be :yourself. If you like to eat spaghetti with your hands, do it. You may not-be called out to dinner again, but you wouldn't have wanted to live with all those unsullied characters anyhow. Rush dinners are not intended to frighten anybody, they are simply a means by which ;you can meet the brothers of a house, and they can meet you. Try to meet as many people as you can. If you don't get a bid at the house you like, try not to hold a grudge. The brother might be saying, "Don't go away mad, just go away," but I doubt it. What usually happens is that you didn't have that certain something that lights up their scoreboard, that gays "this guy's for us." No one is to blame; no crime has been committed. More often than not, it's their loss, not yours. Remem • ber, you probably won't get every job you'll ever apply for either. Maybe for the same reasons. If you do get a bid at the house you like, congratula tions. But before accepting a bid, find out all the details (or as many of them as you can). Talk to your parents, talk to your friends, and think about what you really want. Also, stop by the house sometime when you're forum area. The region, despite its size, includes few major industrial cen ters. Thus, the emphasis of the' University's center seems to be on the creation of jobs in the long term through research and devel opment. ' This is not the first time the board has expressed disappoint ment in the University's proposals. Earlier this year the board delayed granting the center its initial $250,- 000 appropriation until the Univer sity agreed to adjust its proposal to follow six conditions, including an increase in funding for its two sa tellites. • However, John L. Leathers, ex ecutive director of the University's center, said he believes the cen ter's proposal was a good one. Rather than complaining about the second-year budget, he wants to concentrate on creating a positive proposal for board consideration next week. Perhaps , nexkyear the center will have made some progress and the board will have a better idea of what the .University's center is trying to do. Perhaps then it will respond favorably with more fund ing. Pennsylvanians need jobs now, but they must also look ahead to ensure that jobs will exist for them in the future. The partnership was created, for economic development as well as for job creation and that goal should riot be forgotten. The research that results in im provements takes time. So the de velopments that will make the state's economy grow tomorrow deserve the patience and support of citizens, business leaders and gov ernment officials today. not expected lunch, for example. It could alter whatever impression you have. One of the more popular misconceptions about fra ternities is that "pledging" and "slavery" are nearly synonomous terms. Wrong. Granted, pledging is no picnic but if approached with a positive attitude and a dash of optimism, it can be rewarding. Most pledge programs I've heard about (God forbid) are twofold in nature: 1. Learning the pledges get to know the brothers, some facts about the house's history, and perhaps a few trivialities, secrets as it were; and 2. House maintenance this is the tough part. Pledges are responsible for the menial labor and that goes for maintaining the house's physical plant. Sweeping car pets, cleaning toilets, washing windows, changing lightbulbs, raking leaves, you name it. (They have been known to move an occasional keg or two as well.) Depending on the number of pledges at any given house, daily "duties" can usually be completed some where between 20 and 45 minutes. When you hear that house A's pledge program is tougher than house B's, what are you to think? Chances are, the difference in the programs lies,in the "learn ing" aspect of the program. From what I can guess, it's not what the pledges are being taught, but how the pledges are being taught. House A's brothers, for example, think that their pledges should learn the finer points of socializing --- they lock them in a room' with a keg of beer and instructions to finish it before coming out. "That's - buffalo chips," you say. "I'd never put up with that. Typical fraternity nonsense." Well, have you ever been locked in a room with five or six of your buddies and enough beer to last the night? House B has a reputation for yelling and screaming at their pledges when the duties haven't been done. When house B's bathroom hadn't been cleaned in two days, leaving just enough slime on the floor for a good game of flip-flop hockey, the brothers decided it was time for a chat with the pledges. When I left a pair pf underwear in my father's bathroom this past 'summer, you'd have thought Armageddon had arrived. Same thing. A note about public buffoonery: Streaking, rain dancing, and wearing suits for a week can be fun for some (God save them), hell for others. It's a shame that some traditions cannot be easily lost, but that's the way it is. If you've ever waited in the rain a day and a half for a dorm contract, you know what I mean. Of course, temptations do exist in fraternity houses. You may need to train yourself to study outside the house. You may decide that Wednesday-nighters aren't worth Thursday-morningers. You may find out that all sorority girls are not the same; you may find out that they are. You'll definintely make some adjustments in the way you present yourself, which may be good or bad. And you'll probably find out that the secrets aren't so great, the people aren't so different, and the food still doesn't rate next to Mom's. You'll learn that living in a fraternity holds no mystique it's just a bunch of guys in• a big, old house and you may wonder why so many people view them with contempt. If and when you reach that point, you'll know why I wrote this piece. da% Collegian Thursday, September 1, 1983 0) . 1983 Collegian Inc. Suzanne M. Cassidy Judith Smith Editor Business Manager The Daily Collegian's editorial opinion is determined by its Board of Opinion, with the editor holding final responsibility. Opin ions expressed on the editorial pages are not necessarily those of The Daily Colle gian, Collegian Inc. or The Pennsylvania State University. Collegian Inc., publishers of The Daily Collegian and related publica tions, is a separate corporate institution from Penn State. Board of Editors Managing Editor: Wil liam Scott; Editorial Editor: Marcy Mermel; Assistant Editorial Editor: Maria Martino; News Editors: John Schlander, M. Lee Schneider; Sports Editor: Greg Loder; As- 'Bastions of ignorance' By KARL HOKE 1983 graduate-labor,studies and MARK STEVENSON 1983 graduate•prelaw Reflecting upon , our four years spent at Penn State and more particularly those spent in the Penn State fraternity system, we feel compelled to convey our abhorrence with the Greek system in general and its many and varied manifestations. We made a mistake as freshman when we associated ourselves with organizations we erroneously perceived to represent true camaraderie, academic excellence, and a culture of which emotional and intellectual' growth are a part. Fraternities and sororities, we've discovered, are the complete antithesis of these three and many other qualities. Indulgence in material objects (houses and the latest fashion, for example), their simple and easily under stood designs and uses, preclude an appropriate under standing of the nature and purpose of higher education. Getting drunk, getting laid and - partaking in intramu rals are held to be sacrosanct by the Greeks. However, this preoccupation with sports, genitals and intoxica tion retards the achievement of the human intellectual potential. The phrase "bastions of ignorance" is all too appropriate. The values exalted in Greek society here at Penn State should be subordinated to more intellectually and emotionally. mature ideals. Greeks are so cohesive and conspicuous that students perceive them as trendset ters and cultivators of accepted social norms. This is tragic. The values and norms seen as acceptable by so many students are, in fact, a collection of sophomoric, ostentatious displays. A smattering of these are: 1. their simplistic, two-'dimensional perceptions of the world; 2. their equation of Greeks with what is com mendable and non-Greeks with what is not; 3. the dehumanizing aspects of pledging and initiation rites (which are for the i most part meaningless and child- ish); and lastly, the exploitation and degradation of women, manifested in the interest in tales of explicit escapades. This brief listing only suggests the immatu rity-that pervades Greek life. For one Greek to call another brother or sister, there must first exist a period of debasement heavily laden with, notoriously traditional hazing. We term this "brotherhood by initial subordination." They contend the end justifies the means. Brotherhood, as we understand it, is a bond emanat ing from a necessary precondition of equality and mutual respect, not . one of inequity and• humil iation. Friendship and brotherhood must be marked by simultaneity; they must be co-extensive. To suggest, as the Greeks do, that true brotherhood exists as a precursor to friendship is not only ludicrous and unfounded, but is consistent with their simplistic per- sistant. Sports Editors: Liz Kahn, John Severance, Chris Wightman; Photo Editor: Eric Hegedus; Assistant Photo Editors: Paul Chiland, Thomas Swarr; Arts Editor: Shawn Israel; Assistant Arts Editor: 'Ron Yeany; Campus Editor: Alecia Swasy; As sistant.CampusEditor: Ann Matturo; Town Editor: Mike Netherland; Assistant Town Editor: Rebecca Albert; Features Editor: Pete Waldron; Assistant Features Editor: Jeanne Ann Curry; Graphics Eclitor: Gary Feiss; Copy Editors: Dina Defabo, Sheila McCormick, Marcia McGrath, Stella Tsai; Weekly. Collegian Editor: Brian Bowers; Weekly Collegian Assistant Editor: Michele Pupach. Board of Managers Assistaht Business Manager: Mary T. McCaffrey; Office Man ager: Colleen Waters; Sales Manager: Terri Alvino; Assistant Sales Manager: Mark Reb holz; Layout Coordinator: Michele McNa mara; Marketing Manager: Beverly Sobel; National Ad Manager: Susan Melle; Assis tant National , Ad- Manager: Marianne Smulski. forum , The Daily Collegian Thursday Sept. 1, 1983 - I‘ort \ )i„j'k)MS! Letters Polici: The Daily Collegian encour ages comments on news coverage, editori al 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 altimni 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 guar antee publication of all the letters it receiv es. Mail letters to: The Daily Collegian; 126 Carnegie Building; University Park, Pa. 16802. Names may be withheld on request. Letters may also be selected for publica tion in The Weekly Collegian. ceptions of the world. How can brotherhood defined by these standards be viewed as anything but hypocrisy? Another flag of of deficiency flown by Greek organi zations is their exclusionary membership practices. Of 1,220 fraternity members pictured in the 1983 edition of La Vie, only four are black. This is one-third of 1 percent, or less than one-§ixth of the current UniverSi ty-wide ratio. If blacks want to partake in the Greek experience, (why they would want to escapes us), they are limited to joining all black fraternities. Although no purposeful segregation is ever admitted to, the dis crimination result of exclusionary membership prac tices serve as sufficient evidence that fraternities are, in fact, racist. This same prevalent racism extends to sororities. To establish and maintain a position in their social hierarchy, or "pecking order,", Greeks, by consensus, judge their prospective initiates on superficial criteria. This amounts to a process that subordinates individual ity to the procurement of clones. Exclusionary criteria employed as tools of appraisal, combined with the relentless, voluntary submission to this shallow scrutinizatiori, is a perversion of man's supposed ability to objectively and independently eval uate himself and his peers. This inevitably leads to conformity ( through less than sublime) coerSion. Should one of the Greeks develop any inclination to venture from the narrow, preordained paths of materialism, ignorance, immaturity, 'arrogance and such, he or...she is immediately mocked, chastised, labeled weird, and either pressured into conforming or is summarily ostracized from the order. It is bewildering even shocking that organiza tions such as these not only exist, but flourish at institutions of higher learning. Any rational, educated, empathetic human being must hold fraternities and sororities as anathema. Pulling through our time of involvement in fraternal organizations cursed by pre tentiousness, over-indulgence in useless luxury, post ponement of the maturation process, and dogmatic conformity to regressive ideals, we cannot help but feel angry, bitter, ashamed and offended. In fact, the only solace we can find in our experience with the Penn State Greeks, is that to fully appreciate the light, one must first ,be submerged in total darkness. We've discovered that when one matures and realizes that values held dear by so many are preposterous and repulsive, one is forced to sever any semblence of identification with them. We welcome responses to our commentary,. for Aristotle spoke the truth when he said, "Merl are competent judges only of that which they understand." The Daily Collegian invites all readers to submit forums for this page on any current topic concerning the University, the nation or the. world. All, forums should be three to five double-spaced typed pages long and should include the writer's name, semester and major, if applicable, and phone number. They should be mailed, or brought to The Daily Collegian, 126 Carnegie Building, University Park, P,a., 16802. worgemoexe,,Aoszrm reader opinion Vietnam vet I read with sorrow in the Au gust 30th edition in The Daily Colle gian of yet another tragic death of another Vietnam veteran. This 30- year-old man, who baptized people in the Ohio River while he was dressed only in his fatigues, was killed by police as he was shooting at them while trying to fire-bomb the-police station. As the police had said about this man, "We all realized sooner or later we were•going to have a prob- STUDENTS TELEPHONES & ACCESSORIES Discount Prices Phones from $14.95 Village Hardware Parking Lot 1524 N. Atherton St. State College Mon.-Sat. 10 a.m.-6 p.m. 4)' / BECOME A 4-LETTER MAK % . 3) . q 1, 1% Ci.:CV• s n:Cl,) ' 'l\ lire kv s ~ I • Why arc a lot of college men and women becoming buddies in Army ROTC! Probably because Army ROTC is full of the kind of people other people go out of their way to meet. ROTC students tend to be high achievers ‘vho are interested in more than their studies. They're popular students with a serious side. hut who like to have a good time, too. Ijj • In other words, when people joirrArmy ROTC they often meet people a lot like them selves. • For more information. contact your Professor of Military Science. ARMY ROTC. BE AJLLYOU CAN BE. Call or See Maj. Perry F. Denniston 212 Wagner 863-0368 Tern with him." So, another "prob lem" out of the way. My guess is that at least 50,000 "problems" have been eliminated from society, whether in some such similar manner, or by even more directlY self-inflicted wounds. Add to this the number of men finding their way into prisons around the country who could not "readjust" upon their return home from the war, and the number of "problems" removed from society soars! The fact is the problems of Vietnam remain quite clearly im- . planted in our society today, and for many, the Vietnam War has not gone away so easily. The Vietnam veteran with residual "readjustment" prob lems is much like the alcoholic , he affects at least 10 others around him, from his family, neighbor, employer, to the unknown "other guy" he meets on the street corner. The Vietnam War was 10 years long long enough to include nearly three million teen age men. Think of it this way:, the combatant in World War II was, on the average, 25 years old; the Viet nam veteran was 19 years old. In Allenwa - p 6:arber 01,31wp Call or walk in PRESEASON SKI SALE STARTS SEPT. 3 rd • Here are a few Of our many specials • KIDS PKG. NOVICE PKG. INTERM. PKG. Dosage°, Ski $735 Olin 730 $235 OW Kid Ski $37 Salomon 326 $9O Solomon 637 $lO5 Solomon bind. $5O Dolomite boots $ 9 Solomon boot $lB5 Dolomite boot $4O 1101 . 5 s2o. Poles $2B Mount $lO Mount & umx Mount a wax $lB 'NOW $99 $137 NOW $279 $4OB SALE $399 $566 BOOTS Reg.; Now SKIS Rig. Now BINDINGS DOLOMITE ELAN 904 $205 $l5O SALOMON 437 Cortina ....$9O $69 Rossi STS $275 $2lO mo d ftB s o l:s NOW $79 LANGE OLIN 770 $255 $2OO / Reg. $llO NOW $B9 XL-Flax $lB9 $139 K 2 712 $285 $245 MARKER MIS Reg. $9O NOIIIO9 SALOMON mem X $240 $175 ilso $lBO $l4O • CLOTHES Reg. Now Parkas $lOO-240 from $35 Bibs L 4 pants $54125 from $49 Sweaters 00400 from $29 Stretch pants $lOO-175 from $BO Shells $48.75 from $35 AND SO MUCH MOW ( 1 1118 LlEll 01E1100 224 E. College Ave. 237-2655 11 P Mthe Tollege Bitter 24 Hour Egg, Omelette and Burger Specials Open 24 Hours a Day, 7 Days a Week • • THE NITTANY LION Two Eggs, Fried or Scrambled, Home Fries, Choice of Bacon or Sausage with an Order of OUR OWN Famous Grilled Sticky Cinammon Roll 2.10 • THE NATIONAL CHAMP —Two Eggs, Fried or Scrambled, Home Fries, a Ham Slice. Two Sausage Links and Two of OUR OWN Sourdough Batter Pancakes stuffed with Blueberries and Served with Butter and Choice of 5yrup5...3.95 • THE PENN STATER —Three Egg Omelette with Bacon, Fresh Mushrooms and Cheese and an Order of OUR OWN Famous Grill ed Sticky Cinammon Roll 3.05 Bacon and Cheese or Fresh Mushrooms and Cheese. Omelette... 2.75 • THE BLUE & WHITE —Open Face Double Burger on a Toasted English Muffin Covered with OUR OWN Cream Cheese Sauce and topped with Bacon and Mushrooms 2.65 Bacon or Mushroom Topping 2.40 • THE LION'S PREY Three Diner Burgers Served on a Giant Sesame Seed Roll with Lettuce, Tomato, and Mayo • 3.05 3.55 with Cheese • THE COLLEGE DINER —Fried Egg and Diner , Burger Served on a Toasted Roll 1.35 with cheese 1.55 Open 24 Hours other words, he was like most fresh men or sophomores in college today who are in the midst of their identity revolution. Some identity! Survival instinct, anger and depression. The problems, from the war itself to the unwelcome homecoming, are too numerous to explore in a single, short letter. Because Marines have recently been killed in Lebanon, and American troops are inland in South America, perhaps America's like the individual Americans' —ex periences in Vietnam wuld be enlight ening to us all. I would suggest to FOR A . STYLISH CUT AT BARBERSHOP PRICES Hear Ye! Hear Ye! 315 S. Allen St. 238-4302 126 W. College Ave. anyone interested in a refined explo ration of "The 10-year War," now 10 years old, to consider watching the Penn State PBS-TV series special beginning Oct. 4, which presents a 10- part series examining aspects of the war, from various personal, social, political, and historical perspectives. Some of the stories and some of the forgotten aspects of Vietnam need to be remembered. James E. Pendorf, ACSW, graduate individual and family studies Sept. 1. ********* 4 1( .4 ( IN CONCERT - 4( .4( FREE A********* SUN 9/4 8:00 P.M. Wilk PENN STATE OUTING CLUB 5,- • olf STUDENT INTRAMURAL BUILDING THE PENNSYLVANIA STATE UNIVERSITY • UNIVERSITY PARK, PA 16802 MAIN CLUB SLIDE PRESENTATION Thurs. 7:00 Schwab Aud. Topics to be discussed: • Bicycle Division Routes, rides Bike shop • ~Canoeing Division Racing, river trips Boatbuilding • Equestrian Division Trallrides • Hiking Division -- Backpacking --- Trail maintenance • Mountaineering Division Climbing trips Repelling • Alpine skiing Division Term break trips Local passes • Cross-Country Division Local trails ' Membership opportunities include equipment rentals and instruction. Share the fun, get involved . . . 0153 Trip a joyrnalist today. Collegian Thursday, Sept. 1, 1983-9 The Daily Volunteer. ********* * * * * * FREE 4 04 Wl4. IN CONCERT HUB LROOM