2—The Daily Collegian Thursday. April 12. 19R4 Residence halls celebrate spring Spring week turnouts have been large in 3 dorm areas, representatives report By KAREN NAGLE Collegian Staff Writer Turnouts for "spring weeks" be ing held in three residence hall areas this week have been large, student government representa tives from each area have reported. Students in North, East and Pol lock/Nittany Residence Halls are celebrating spring by participating in the special activities planned for them by their area governments. Tami Mohney, president of North Halls Residence Association, de scribed the turnout for North Week so far as excellent. The event began on April 7 and will end April 14. The prestigious annual Emperor of the North contest is off to a good start with 15 aspiring blue-bloods seeking the royal throne, she said. Mohney said the contest is com posed of 69 events, each with differ ent point values. The participant with the highest number of points will win the contest, she said. However, the road to the coveted crown is not an easy one. Mohney said a. sampling of events includes "swimming" in the HUB Fishbowl and making "fishfaces" at the peo ple there; sitting in front the Penn State Bookstore on campus and barking like a dog; crawling on hands and knees up the mall on campus; buying an ice cream cone and smashing it against their fore- ' WHAT SETS US APART FROM THE OTHER R I T VETERINARY SCHOOLS? 0) Personalized Education ROSS UNIVERSITY SCHOOL OF VETERINARY MEDICINE • AVMA Listed • ENGLISH is the language of instruction • • FULL TIME qualified faculty from U.S. Veterinary Schools • AMERICAN Veterinary School curriculum developed by Deans of U.S. veterinary schools • CLINICAL training offered in the United States • GRADUATES eligible to take U.S. licensure exams Now accepting applications for July and November 1984 ' semesters. Financial Assistance Available. RFOR FURTHER INFORMATION Call Warren Ross OSS Toll Free Within N.Y. State 1-800-462-4070. U . . Outside N.Y. State 1.800-828-8011 nwersrty or Write: Caribbean Admissions. Inc. k t 5 16 W. 32nd Street. New York. N.Y.10001 • Dept. . i the e Writes 4:h You're no dumb bunny lg . V • 43 1 , when you buy a book for Easter. Spring into books at the Tenn State cßook,tore on campus Owned & Operated by the Pennsylvania State University 2110 N.ATHERTON ST. STATE COLLEGE, PA.161300 NE XI TO THE PARK FOREST C.AR WASH, OPEN IP AM-9PM MON:SAT 2384570 FEATURING SMALL ANIMALS & BIRDS FOR EASTER M. PARAKEETS: $18.99 GUINEA PIGS:FROM $9.99 HAMSTERS:S 3.99 COCKATIELS• FROM $70.00 heads; and putting a propeller on their noses and then flying like an airplane up the mall. Mohney said students may still enter the Emperor of the North contest, which is open only to North Halls residents. The victor will be announced between 10 and 10:30 p.m. •April 14 at Zeta Psi, 225 E. Foster Avenue. Events held for North week so far include a water balloon toss; tug-of war; the first round of the "room mate game," which is similar to the "Newlywed Game;" a blood mobile competition; a basketball shooting contest; a dance; and a relay race called "college capers." An all-day concert will be held The Fun Is For Everyone! GREEK WEEK 'B4 Skits Tonight! 7-9:30 Pollock Rec. Room R• 313 (;_Gri . .. . - •: . • C, : X ..: . .. ii). c, Pet Emporium . 0 ' , - - .;• l ‘'"N 1 ) •••._,, ..t , . _~-~. r from noon to 7 today on the basket ball courts. Bands for the event are BCS, The Deacons, Bookends and Vitamin Z. In addition, a wrist wrestling contest and midnight jog are planned. Tomorrow, residents will com pete in a pie-eating contest and the final round of the "roommate game." On Saturday, a game called the "Daily Grind" and a talent show will be held. East Residence Association Pres ident Kori Staudt said 56 of a total of 60 houses in East Halls are partici pating in activities. The houses are competing against one another in the events, she said. East Halls kicked off its spring • 6,T,6, • AO • ATA • MD • AL& • AO • OTO• MD • AMA • 4 • De ll s (you. liP • rascals), c. F- 4 Our gang is the best in the i .- 3 > • • e neighborhood this' Greek Week. > <4 We're 0-tay! e • Love, the Alpha Phi's • E- . I> -3 4 U-154 C> • MD 0 STA 0 MD • ATA • MD 0 ATA • AO 0 ATA • AvD 0 UNIVERSITY CALENDAR Thursday, April 12 P.S. Labor Studies Club'presents a Student-Trade Union Conference Day, 10 a.m. to 5 p.m., Room 301 HUB. Student Assistance Center meeting, 4 p.m., Room 319 HUB. HUB Eateries, Founders Room special dinner, 5-7 p.m. American Society of Civil Engineers meeting, 7 p.m., Room 207 Sackett. New Life Christian Fellowship meeting, 7 p.m., Room 305 HUB. Health Planning & Admin. Club meeting, 7 p.m., Room 323-324 HUB. Transfer Laison Corp. meeting, 7 p.m., Room 320 HUB. Undergraduate Entomology Club meeting, 7 p.m., Room 118 Sackett. Outing Club-Equestrian Div. meeting, 7 p.m., Room 318-9 HUB P.S. Water Ski Club meeting, 7 p.m., Room 314 Boucke. Alpha Kappa Psi meeting, 7:15 p.m., Room 217 Willard. P.S. Sailing Club meeting, 7:30 p.m., Room 106 Boucke. Black Students United for Progress in Science meeting, 7:30 p.m., Room 320 Boucke. Management Club meeting, 8 p.m., Room 217 Boucke. ARHS Central Court meeting, 8:30 p.m., Room 307 HUB week on April 6 with a dance. Other events have been an all-day con cert, an ice cream social, a coffee house, a pie-eating contest, ice skating and a talent show. Tonight, residents will take ad vantage of the nice weather with a water balloon toss and all-night movies. Tomorrow evening, houses will struggle against one another in a tug-of-war in the Findley Quad. Volleyball preliminaries and an obstacle course game called "Late for a Date" will be held on Satur day. The final volleyball games will be played on Sunday. In Pollock/Nittany residence hall area, activities began April 7 with a semi-formal. d•~~-eEru?%r Proposed appeal to ICC may OK bus fare increase By DAN LEVINE Collegian Staff Writer Although the Pennsylvania Public the proposal to the ICC next week and Utilities Commission rejected Grey- the Commission will have 60 days to hound Bus Lines' proposed rate in- decide the case'. crease, Pennsylvania may still see its bus fares increase. Greyhound plans to submit an ap peal to the Interstate Commerce Commission next week which, if passed, would raise the. company's Robert Longwell, assistant counsel 'state fares 15 percent. • to the PUC, said the ICC has over4 i The increase, which would give the turned a substantial number of cases • company an additional $1.2 million in which the PUC rejected. annual revenue, was rejected by the "Almost every time the state ha PUC on March 16 on grounds that the not allowed a rate increase and thq company had not proven the need . for common carrier has appealed, thd the rate hike. ICC has allowed the rate, increase to "The PUC.believes the company's go through," Longwell said. "The e current revenue is sufficient because ICC consistently overturns the state's the firm is saving money from recent decision and allows the rates to in-: wage cuts and from the dropping of crease." unprofitable routes,", John Frazier, information spokesman for the PUC, Frazier said the controversy over said. Greyhound's proposal began in Fetid ~. Greyhound, however, still believes ruary when PUC Administrative Law its increase is legal and reasonable Judge Robert A. Christianson recom and will propose the same rate in mended the PUC reject the rate .in crease because the company had ij crease to the ICC. Leslie White, director of public proven the need for additional reve . , < relations for Greyhound, said the Bus nue. Regulation Reform Act, passed b y Greyhound disagreed with Chris- Congress in 1982, allows companies to tianson and filed exceptions which raise their intrastate fares to the stated the judge's errors in his me - , level of their interstate fares. ommendation, Frazier said. "We are not doing anything that is When the PUC reviewed the case'on not reasonable, especially given the March 16, the Commission decideci;fp status of the Bus Act," White said. uphold Christianson's recommend " Greyhound has shown a need to tion. Dates: Thu/March 29 Fri/March 30 Thu/April 12 Fri/Apr Sat/March 31 Sun/April 1 Sat/April 14 Sun/Ap Tender Juicy Sirloin Steak with the World's Biggest, Best Salad Buffet; Beverage and Dessert. A Complete Treat! Only SA99 T T h he at a 's ig P g o e n s d t ero sa. 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Coupon . good .7.1. - Valld until priVl3oosl" 5/20;84, v a lid un til volglTOSis 51mm, valid until pONSTOSIs 5119i84. -- .--- ---.----- MON MUM Mil 111111111111111 NOM 1111111111 I• I Chopped steak is US D A ,nspedled 100°° chopped beet steak -TVISA Dt ll ° S tarill lIOUSE STENI • •..-- . ". raise its Pennsylvania fare to the level of the out-of-state fares." Although White could not predict whether the ICC would overturn thet PUC's ruling, she said the ICC over; turned similar cases in Arkansas and Tennessee. 1630 S. Atherton St. (At University Drive) White said Greyhound will submit 'UM r FREE Smurf Cup with every kid's meal and beverage k Wilk. quantities 1984 Ponderosa, Inc. Plastic cash cannot replace the real thing, prof says ''By TANJA KOR Collegian Staff Writer The concept of an American "cashless ''society" that became popular with the in -I'2 ception of credit cards could not become '/ reality because too many transactions re quire currency, a University assistant pro fessor of finance said recently. "Credit cards could replace currency only cif every transaction can be completed with a credit card," Gautam Vora said, citing vending machines, lending and many small )?purchases as examples of transactions that 'cannot be carried out with credit cards. Vora said credit cards could not replace currency because the cards do not perform ,:all the functions currency performs. ,;: "Credit cards are essentially a line of .Lcredit," Vora said. "The company has to be persuaded of your credit worthiness. The ::.medium of transaction is the credit, not the Survey shows most students use aid to pay tuition By ANITA J. KATZ etilleglan Staff Writer • Among 1980 high school graduates enrolled in postsecondary institutions inil9Bl-82, 75 percent used some form offinancial assistance to pay for their education, a recent survey shows. ,4 survey conducted by the National :enter, for Educational Statistics (N.CES) reports that 11 percent of the gtiidents used three forms of financial The Knothole 11 1 Vora added that the card, because it is a symbol, is neither a standard of mea surement nor a store of value. Because not every person in the country can possess a credit card, it could never replace cash, he said. In addition, Vora said that while currency has only an opportunity cost, the credit card has two costs; the cost accepted by the user and the cost accepted by the buyer. "The store accepting the credit card has to pay 3 to 7 percent of the transaction to the credit card company," he said. Therefore, many small businesses do not accept credit cards. Also, Vora said store owners can now legally impose service charges to credit card owners. "The law forbidding the service charge has expired," he said. "So at the moment, store owners can charge lower prices to cash payers." Credit card owners will discontinue using aid earnings, grants and loans to pay for education costs. Twenty-six percent used combinations of two forms, and 37 percent used only one. Only 25 percent used none of the forms and presumably relied on their parents to fund their education, the survey said. C. Dennis Carroll, chief of NCES's longitudinal studies branch, said the survey was one of several studies based on the same group of students. WEEKEND SPECIAL 20% OFF All-Ready-Made SILK FLOWERS Choose from our large selection of gorgeous silk blossoms in a whole rainbow of colors. Perfect for Spring and Easter decorating! Thursday April 12th thru Saturday April 14th. Carroll said base-year data for the study were collected from a sample of high school seniors in spring 1980. Questionnaires completed by the same students in 1982 about how they financed their postsecondary educa tion formed the basis for the center's report. NCES is a federal agency' that "generates the numbers used by poli cy analysts, educational analysts, researchers and academics," but is 107 E. Beaver Ave. 234-3314 Daily 9:30-5:30, Thursday until 8 p.m the cards if the law is not reinstated, Vora said. "It is proven beyond a shadow of a doubt that the public wants to control its own account and that's only possible through checks." David B. Lee, president of Peoples National Bank, 117 S. Allen St., said. "It was thought that credit cards would alleviate the problem of paperwork," he said, "but the cashless and checkless socie ty has not progressed like people thought it would." Lee said that while credit cards did not become as universally accepted as was once thought, automated tellers have become much more popular than expected. "Younger people seem to prefer automa ted tellers," he said. "Twenty-five percent of our transactions are done on the automa ted teller." Lee said there is currently no charge for using an automated teller but a charge may be imposed in the near future. not involved in policy decisions, Car roll said. According to the survey, earnings The survey also reports that for all were the major part of student contri- family income levels, the use of more butions to education costs. Twenty- than one source of funds tends to four percent of the students used only increase with higher education costs. earnings, and an additional 56 per- More students attending private cent used combinations of earnings, and public four-year institutions rely loans and grants, to finance their on multiple sources of aid than do education. those attending vocational schools "Earnings," as considered by the and public junior colleges, the survey survey, include wages from employ- shows. preparth. 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 résumé 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 résumé 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 résumés. Not to men tion how much better you'll look. C collegian production Résumé Service 126 Carnegie Building 10 a.m. to 4:30 p.m. or by appointment 863-3215 "Right now, the banks will absorb the costs of educating the public we don't want to scare them off." he said. James Herendeen, University professor of economics, agreed that credit cards have not completely replaced currency because they cannot be used in every transaction. "The credit card owners must face the danger of paying 20 percent interest if they don't pay their bill in the 30-day grace period," Herendeen added. However, he said credit cards will be used even when the cash discount law becomes valid. "Travelers use a lot of credit cards be cause outside their local community they can't cash a personal check," he said. "The only thing that may replace credit cards are cash cards." • "People will use cash cards instead of writing checks," Herendeen said. "A com puter in, say, San Francisco will be able to immediately check your account in State ment and work-study programs and gifts from relatives. ❑ you choose not to be remembered for your initiative in having your résumé professionally typeset and printed. ❑ you'd rather not have your résumé stand out on a desk crowded with ordinary typewritten résumés, or ❑ your uncle happens to be president of the company that's interviewing you. The Daily Collegian Thursday, April 12, 1984 `Credit cards could replace currency only if every transaction can be completed with a credit card!' —Gautam Vora, University assistant professor of finance College." Atta Walk, owner of Walk's Arco station, 535 University Drive, said she has not ac cepted credit cards in two years and "busi ness has gone up." Randall Edwards, employee of the Skat Oil Co., 2146 E. College Ave., said that sales have neither increased nor decreased since he stopped taking credit cards. Edwards said he will continue the .cash-only policy. Borough will flush mains The State College Borough Wa ter Authority will begin to flush area water mains on Monday, April 16, a spokeswoman for the authority said yesterday. Bonnie Fohringer,, office man ager/secretary, said the flushing will begin in the Shingletown area, continue for about 10 weeks. —by Dan Levine