The daily collegian. (University Park, Pa.) 1940-current, November 09, 1983, Image 9

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    16—The Daily Collegian Wednesday, Nov. 9, 1983
•
Campus Poles
Larry Twiss, of State College, casts his vote at the poles in Hamilton Hall while Jeannette Leanza (Junior•business) and
Christy Briggs (freshman•business) help out during yesterday's election.
By DAVID ESPO
Associated Press Writer
Democratic Lt. Gov. Martha Layne
Collins of Kentucky won a "dream
tome true" victory last night to be
2ome the only woman among 50 gov
ernors, while Georgia legislator
3eorge "Buddy" Darden defeated
the widow of slain ultra-conservative
Rep. Larry McDonald to capture a
Flouse seat in off-year elections.
In a featured city hall race in
Philadelphia, sharecropper's son W.
Wilson Goode was victorious in his
aid to become the first black elected
:o lead the nation's fouith-largest
The Kentucky governor's race was
?aired with one ih Mississippi, where
Democrat Bill Allain won election in
1 victory over Republican Leon
3ramlett and a charge of homosex
iality.
! In Washington state, appointed
3rOP Sen. Dan Evans was on the
lallot seeking an extension of his two
nonth term in the Congress in a race
irawing attention, as well, for clues
to presidential, and congressional bal
kitting still a year away.
Mrs. Collins, 46, defeated former
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* Movie will be shown
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Sunday delivery at
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everything
some items 125% off!!
Now thru Christmas while
current supplies last
TM-K Golf Shop
352 E. College Ave.
above
The Candy Shop
Election roundup
baseball player Jim Bunning in a
victory that makes her ,a national
figure overnight in a party that can
not claim a single other incumbent
female senator or governor. Republi
cans had counted on the "woman's
issue" to give Bunning an upset, but
Mrs. Collins told her supporters, "We
made history and I thank you very
much . . . I thank you for making a
dream come true."
She will become the first woman to
run her state government, and only
the third woman in American politics
elected governor without succeeding
her husband. ,
With half of the vote tabulated,
Mrs. Collins had 294,332 votes, or 53
percent, compared to Bunning's 255,-
552 votes, or 46 percent. Independent
Nicholas Cubbin ran a distant third.
In Georgia, Darden claimed his
victory over Kathryn McDonald to
reverse the order of finish 'between
the two Democrats in an open prima
ry election last month.
Complete but unofficial returns
showed Darden had 56,167 votes, or 59
percent, to Mrs. McDonald's 38,880,
or 41 percent.
Darden, a self-described "aggres
sive conservative," ran a campaign
CDPC seminars, Interview Skills, 6th period; Resume Preparation, 7th
period, Conference Room, Walnut Bldg.
Alpha Phi Omega meeting, 6 p.m., Room 217 Willard.
Kern Classics, Rollerball, 7 and 9 p.m., Room 112 Kern. Also Nov. 10.
Council for Exceptional Children meeting, 7 p.m., Room 205 Boucke.
P.S. Aikido Club practice, 7 p.m., IM Bldg. Wrestling Room.
Colloquy meeting, 7 p.m., Room 320-322 HUB.
Horticulture Club meeting, 7 p.m., Room 108 Tyson.
Academic Assembly meeting, 7 p.m., Room 225 HUB.
Alpha Kappa Psi, 7:30 p.m., Room 73 Willard
PSOC Cross Country Ski meeting, 7:30 p.m., Room 111 Boucke.
P.S. Stamp Club meeting, 7:30 p.m., Room 108 Sackett
Dairy Science Club meeting, 7:30 p.m., Room 117 Borland Lab.
PSU Forestry Society meeting/lecture, 7:30 p.m., Room 105 Ferguson
Bldg.
P.S. Equestrian Team meeting, 8 p.m., Room 311 Boucke.
Campus Bible Fellowship meeting, 9 p.m., Room 314 Boucke
UNIVERSITY CALENDAR
Wednesday, November 9
that featured a television commercial
declaring, "He's one of
,us," an evi
dent reminder of Mrs. McDonald's
California background.
"We have all fought a good fight,"
Mrs. McDonald said in a concession
statement. "But we have been hand
icapped . . . It's very difficult to put
your whole heart in something when
half of it is broken."
She ought a mandate to work
"uninterrupted" on the ultra-conser
vative causes espoused by her late
husband. McDonald was the head of
the John Birch Society when he went
down with 268 other people when the
Soviets shot down a Korean Air Lines
passenger jet.
In Mississippi, Allain took a lie
detector test in the campaign's final
days that he said prbved the homo
sexuality charge was false, and out
going Gov. William Winter, a
Democrat, called the race the "dirt
iest, filthiest campaign in state histo
ry."
With 43 percent of the votes count
ed, Allain had 190,128 votes or 55
percent, to 136,903 votes, or 39 percent
for Bramlett. Black activist Charles
Evers and two other independents
trailed.
Rathskeller
By DAN LEVINE
Collegian Staff Writer
They were reminiscing and drinking and celebrating
and drinking some more last night at the All-American
Rathskeller. • ,
"It's the best, most exciting thing that's ever happened
to me," John O'Connell, owner of the Rathskeller, said
last night at a special cocktail -party celebrating the bar's
50th anniversary.
"We've been looking forward to this for a great while
and we're having a good time celebrating number 50," he
said.
The Rathskeller has been around since 1933, the year
Prohibition wag repealed. The furnishings may have
changed, but its rustic ambience has not.
During the cocktail celebration, many of the guests,
including former bartenders, cooks and University stu
dents, talked about the Rathskeller they frequented in the
past.
"On Fridays; you used to have to come in here by noon
time to get a place," said Jerry Bruce, owner of a real
estate company.
y Bill Cramer
"And I'm not talking about a place to sit, I'm talking
about a place to stand. It was so crowded on a Friday
afternoon that you had to hold your beer above your head,
'because there wasn't any other place to hold it."
"We never used to get a date for the weekend," he said.
"We would try to come down here and meet somebody-and
take her out for the weekend. It was like a 'Skeller
challenge.; just the way it was."
Anne Ishler, owner of Ishler's Furniture Store, said the
Rathskeller is steeped in memories and traditions. She
said the main character of the bar has been the same for
most of its history.
"Four generations of my family have drunk at the
'Skeller and my family isn't even from State College,"
Ishler said. "The one thing my grandfather remembered
Experiment approval explained
By ANNE McDONOUGH
Collegian Staff Writer
The process of proposal approval
for experiments involving human
subjects was explained by the di
rector of the University's Office of
Protection of Human Subjects last
night at a Graduate Student Atho
ciation Assembly meeting.
It is University policy that any
research involving human subjects
must be reviewed and passed by
that office, said David L.
Passmore.
He told delegates that although
everyone is familiar with technical
research, "everyone knows that
research goes beyond the technical
side it's a very human act."
. ~.' WORK FOR •
THEIS:I"'EST . ':- •
GROWING AIRLINE
IN THE INDUSTRY
Equal Opportunity Employer M'F
. . . ,
FiLysivuurr'.
PEOPL Express is coming to campus in search of
CO-OP EDUCATION STUDENTS
SOPHOMORES... JUNIORS...
SENIORS...GRAD STUDENTS
START NOW AS A RESERVATIONS SALES ASSOCIATE. You'll be the first point
of contact b:tween PEOPLExpress and our customers, providing accurate
scheduling and price information—and selling seats for PEOPLExpress flights.
You'll be based at NEWARK INTERNATIONAL AIRPORT and you will have a
flexible work schedule that fits in with your classes.
• $5.00 an hour to start—with regularly
scheduled raises
• UNLIMITED TRAVEL PRIVILEGES ON
"PEOPLExpress (Not only for you but
spouses, too, after 30 days of employment)
• FREE PARKING AT THE AIRPORT
TO QUALIFY, you must have a GPA of 2.5 or better, be currently enrolled, be articulate—and
have a mature attitude and business-like appearance. Previous work experience is a must.
Presentations and interviews will be held On November 16th. Contact
Career Development and PlaCement office for further details.
Townspeople toast to 50 years
The subjects are voluntarily re
vealing themselves and care must,
be given to protect them, Passmore
said. The committee members fol
low three principles in considering
research proposals, he said.
First, respect for the subjects is
necessary because their partici
pation is voluntary, he said. Their
"informed consent" is necessary.
The committee members must
also make certain there is a "posi
tive benefit-riik ratio," Passmore
said. Finally, the subjects must
share in the benefits of the re
search, he said.
Anyone having any . questions
concerning the protection of Human
subjects in research is asked to
contact Passmore in 311 Willard or
THE JOB OFFERS ALL THIS:
about the time he spent in State College was being in the
Rathskeller."
She said her grandfather, a marble-setter, came here 40
years ago to work in Old Main.
Dean Smith, past owner of the Rathskeller and employ
ee for 29 years, said the Rathskeller has seen a lot of
changes.
"I started out in 1951 seeing college fraternity people
with blazers and 16afers," he said. "From that, into
Vietnam Veterans, and then into the hippie-type crowd of
the sixties. If was great, and they're all beautiful people.
Different clothes and different looks, but great personali
ties."
Clothes and looks are not all that have changed; prices
have too.
"We used to SE ir 27 halves of draft beer in one day, but
then that beer kind of went out and the trend became
bottled beer," Smith said.
"Since in the middle seventies our draft beer (sales)
were going down and our bottled beer sales were going up,
I decided to start this tradition of Rolling Rock. (We sold)
two bottles at that time, I think, for a quarter. Then we
went to selling a case to the table, and the first thing you
know Rolling Rock sales were really super, and the beer
really took hold," he said. •
And they'll be drinking and celebrating even more
tonight, as the Rathskeller attempts to shatter the world
record of 794 cases of beer sold in'a day.
"That record was set by a bar in Munich, Germany, who
sold all different kinds of beer. We're going to try to sell 1,-
000 cases of Rolling Rock," O'Connell said.
"It's essentially going to be a professional drinking
challenge and I think Penn State's . up to it," he said. "It's
going to be a hell of a party.",
O'Connell said the Rathskeller will be open today at 10
a.m., entertainment will begin at 1:00 in the afternoon and
end at 1:00 a.m. Thursday. •
call 865-1776
In other business, the assembly
passed the constitutions of the Afri
can and Muslim student associa-
The GSA judiciary committee
reviewed the constitutions and rec
ommended their passage, said Jeff
Dooling, committee chairman. Al
though several GSA delegates com
plained about the lack of time to
review the constitutions, Dooling
disagreed. •
The African Student Association
constitution was completed in. Oct
ober and it was on last month's GSA
agenda, he said. Advertisements in
The Daily Collegian advised dele
gates that these constitutions would
be discussed at this meeting.
THE MINIMUM AND MAXIMUM
HOURS YOU MAY WORK ARE:
• Minimum of 4 hours per day
• Minimum of 20 hours per week
• Maximum of 40 hourS per week