2—The Daily Collegian Monday, April 23, 1984 REGATT • . BELIEVE • REGATTA BELIEVE • REGATTA BELIEVE • REGATTA BELIEVE • Gl › r- REGISTER NOW FOR THE 10'h ANNUAL BEB-EAT SY BARASH REGATTA Fraternities, sororities, independents and dorms! Secure a spot in the competition. Register today at East Halls, Pollack Halls, and the HUB BaSement for these events: Q T-shirts and admission tickets available at these locations Q w SEE YA AT THE BEACH! cn REGATTA BELIEVE • REGATTA BELIEVE i REGATTA BELIEVE • REGATTA BELIEVE • Canoe Races • Tug-of-war competition • Dodge truck pull UNI-MART WXLR (X 103) BALD EAGLE STATE PARK Sunday, April 29th Benefits American Cancer Society Alcoholic Beverage Prohibited in Park For more info. call 238-9135 ALL SALES AT THE BEAVER STADIUM TICKET OFFICE 8:30 4:30 WEEKDAYS You must present: • University I.D. Card • Application (only your own) • Payment in Full Applications have been mailed to all continuing full-time graduate and undergraduate students at your local address. A June sellout is expected... :secure your ticket before leaving campus. If you have not received an application by May 1, call or visit the Beaver Stadium Ticket Office _ (865-7567) SPONSORED BY PENN STATE UNIVERSITY Sounds of music return to West Halls this week By KAREN NAGLE Collegian Staff Writer West Halls Radio may return to the air this week because of the recent election of last year's West Halls Residence Association president to general manager of the station, the current WHRA president said Fri day. Christy Briggs said the election of Steve Diano . last Thursday by West Halls Radio Organization - - will ease relations between WHRA, which owns the station equipment, and the newly formed radio organization, which has exclusive operating rights to the station. WHRA and WHRO may take some temporary measures to open the sta tion this week, such as broadcasting .WQWK through West Halls, she said. Later, when the radio station is operating normally again with its own disc jockeys, WHRA will proba bly insist that "top 40" music be played when a lot of students are in the dining halls, Briggs said. She said a recent poll of West Halls residents indicates they prefer "top 90" music. WHRA and WHRO have been at odds for several weeks. The dispute stems from the Feb, 28 closing of the station by then WHRA President Di ano because two turntables used to broadcast were stolen. At that time, WHRA had operating rights to the station The chief engineer of the station, Reginald Arford, under the impres sion the station was to be closed on a permanant basis, then formed WHRO to get the station back on the air, Arford said. In a March.2B article in The Daily Collegian, Joe Schaper', Undergrad uate Student Government Supreme Court Justice, said the court gave operating rights to WHRO after the justices saw a letter written by Diano that said the station had been cloSed "indefinitely." The court understood "indefinitely" to mean on a perma-. nant basis, he said. Because WHRO has operating rights but no equipment, and WHRA has the equipment but no operating rights, the two organizations need to work together to re-open the station, Schaper said. However, until the election of Diano to general manager, the two organi zafions have not been able to work together, Briggs said. She said Arford lost the trust of the council when he formed WHRO with out WHRA's knowledge. As a result, 1, council members have been reluctant to work with Arford, she said. Diano said the important thing for WHRO now is to get funding from Associated Student Activities, so that it can operate the station normally. Government offers cheaters the chance to pay up By SALLY JACOBSEN AP Economics Writer WASHINGTON Conscience both ering you, only a week after the income tax deadline? Can't forget about that little item you kept from Army days? Want to help reduce that monster budget deficit? Or just grateful to be living in the United States? If so, the government has a special place for you and your money. The Treasury Department's bu reau of government financial opera tions handles four special accounts for Americans who want to contribute something extra to the government or want to clear their conscience about something they should or shouldn't have done. The oldest of the four is the .Con science Fund, set up in 1811 when "somebody sent us $5," William E. Douglas, commissioner of the finan cial operations bureau, recounted in a recent interview. Before the year was out, the gov ernment had added $250 to its coffers from people troubled by their con science. Since then, the fund has collected a total of $4,814,352.94. Douglas said the biggest sum sent in was 'about $139,- 000 in 1950, when the account also received the most in one year, $370,285.47. Last year, it got $238,069.23. The money goes into the general coffers for running the government. Douglas said the reasons people send in "conscience" money vary, but most "have to do with the feeling that they have done something they shouldn't have done or should have done regarding the country or gov ernment very broadly." COB (MO rot) CIAO rOB CIAO MB (MO ros 06,0 roa (DA° Dm (MO roB (D,6,c• PHI DELT Even though we were you'll always be number one in our hearts! Holly, Kathy, MB, Lee Pee P.S. Even you Goldfish ros (MO ros (MO ros imo FOB (MO Das (MO roB (MO rillEi (MO ros (Deo You put it on your paper, and we'll put it in' ours. :Collegian "The theme that runs through is remorse," he said. One man confessed he had "misap propriated" a $5 pair of bathing trunks from the military. Two de cades later, he sent the government $13.85 to cover the cost of the swim suit plus interest, compounded monthly, at 4.5 percent for 16 years and 10 percent for three. Another apologized for "waiting so long to 'right' " his mistake and sent money to cover a couple of machetes and staple guns kept from his mili tary days. A third ex-serviceman was bothered by the $lO to $2O payout he got several times from cheating a pinball machine. • one writer. Admitted "intentional ly" burning two $5O bills a few years earlier. "I am sending over $lOO to reimburse my mistake. I should not have done it," said the letter. And a letter addressed to the "tax collectors" wanted "to get something straightened out with ya 'll before I can ( be) with the Lord Jesus." The writer's failing: Not reporting tip income to the Internal Revenue Serv ice. While the Conscience Fund is the oldest of the special accounts, the fund to reduce the public debt may be better known because IRS Commis sioner Roscoe Egger included a mes sage inviting such contributions with this year's tax returns. He noted that such gifts are tax-deductible.. Through April 13, the IRS said, 1,- 705 of this year's returns included checks totaling $217,189 to wash away some of the $1.4 trillion-plus in red ink. The smallest contribution so far: one cent. The biggest: $40,000. Last year, the debt-reduction fund got $911,179.45, bringing the total to $7,058,912.16 since its start in the sth overall Love, early 19605. The biggest account is Gifts to the United States, said Douglas. Since its inception in 1843, it has received donations of $53,017,030.29, many from people who express pride and gratitude to the United States, Douglas said. One contributor told the Treasury he had "prospered a little this last year and I would like to repay some of the benefits I receive from my coun try." Enclosed was a $325 check. Another writer, who left Russia in 1906, sent $35,000. "With' me it is not what the country will do for me, it is what I can do for the country," he explained in a letter to then-President Jimmy Carter. Some members of Congress unhap py with their colleagues for voting themselves pay raises have turned over the extra salary to the govern ment; where it has gone into the gift account. , Also returning money was a retiree who said, "This money is from my old-age pension, which I did not use so am sending it back to you." The newest, and smallest, of the special accounts is the National De fense Conditional Gift Fund, which was opened in 1973 for donations designated for the country's security. One contributor, for example, sent $2OO to do toward a tank. Last year, the fund received $54,872.97, bring the 10-year total to $126,461.76. For those interested in sending a tle extra to the government, the 'dress is: Bureau of Government rnaneial Operations, Treasury An •x No. 1, Room 300, Washington, .C. 20226. Said Douglas: "Keep the cards and tters coming." . STATE COLLEGE...ON CALDER WAY (gehind the Tavern) Shop daily 10 to 5:30 Thurs to 8:30 ALTOONA...ON 11TH AVENUE 11111. 0 I\ 0, Choose from these fashion colars - Teal, Black, oyel, Navy, r 1 - "AV'loacklit f. ,, ,c• 'l6Ol ‘-‘, +I :stw,, SfAsii t ii! . . V...-tre:e4.A . rAlvc okiev ..AZ . • 1 iv: -4. ir . ...,..',1,./4•Av i ii t .l.4o .% ...,...e.r . 4 .. - ,tro N r i .,. 4 4 ,,. 0) frvv,it. xv.c.,•...,,r,„;-../ V . t i Nl O‘ itilp V 4 /4 1 ..ifig j i?!'4o. ?kr( 4 1 4 01 F 1 . 4 0)k:414VrA1: '"t49ll*lrAt*S. 4 l 14: 4t 7 4.47i1t'; \I 4 1:443X:0)Mrkrt"I', J; if' Ili a ' .:0r k . 4 7 i nit .., 1.. ..t a l'".i. rL. i Vei t • e :j14.;f:4 P . 7; i ... 1;1 1'41-0 4 44 *Z4r i ci:, , t , al , ::c 1..a..-1C,...p • .4 - 44.:em . ,14;1 • ,, sfyit .l 4:74!;,:i.c?' vtler...4;wm% 'N:i7E7;ittk44 7 l7 ...tillifiqc .. t . :l4•WkW4k.*: ..%-i5 ; .1. , *,.. 41 . r: 1,,1 i? -13 St•I'A‘ i ckif:i:&•-( 4 7'4 . 4k.',, 4 Ada•e./*Tikplft..4 Tiotve•rivrjivt> :4 . pel..„ ...:. .0e....47 ,, xmi t .,. ...,,:o. ........ ; , ....n. 0.F.. Avect l / 4 4.4. 14,•,.....,... 5 ie icp. , :. ...t.fit.e....45.,. 4430 ..N . „ 40 .... 1 to Y. e1,,..,ftrir.k....1. F i. it e 1, r.:: : : ..,..4.4.,N, '',* .. 1 .•%e ..e : ., Nv- ;I f c s ) wt . a: .P.r.4'...w.: •injl,l. 1eef7:c.f405 414 - 4 "••'' ' '', .k.P.`4 , ..t t AV : " Wre' ; jia, rtv lll ._`: , ,1 1 1 , ,~ i :.~~ Ali `~~ BOTTOMS UP! e'r Cheers! Finally fashion has gone down under. 100% cotton color co ordinated tops and briefs by Calvin Klein. Here's to ya! al ftrerliZWVFOLAtfis 4•At9 ~ . ,-4':,.:•"';'47:Tel4' • safe 4}431.14:01"7.4i1.. 1141 1 , • IV 7.2:letifeb;ste. c (Awe, . lk,sll4:4ll4.v4!K•irvive.l'T.ll!hiws vp.t9/ C aerfir.3l4 4: l . • .V, . 40 :4QY A .:;t1 NI. ' ;i t e 1:7 1761!" :rd' l'iSriettArNit:Ao,Aptli :34ipt:, 5'eg1itTer.f740.:•14..4:4•:.;7 ti.t• ls 0 • * zl•4:.,vri• MiTrlt i • IV' . evek5yt,,:re,........",..,..5vp.7.41.• ~.,.,........ „. •.4, s . •••• ,•• i -% Ili* r • ''• ... t.litikr or AU.% ' LatO.P. tr j 1,41it.F., •••ZA:41:411.1;i.t.i.; t:fisli ri : ... Wk•WV 'lt. i'%..641V4',1•101ta•tt,11.: .t`C.::: ""t I; 1t,it.......414r, ~,.. ...,41;-: 4..14;4 . :lc ~.4.4',;;1i lit:q.,.. •Ar % '''. • . $1.1,e.5-4-;, • %ll.4, i , l , k,:mswes!ztr• il to ?: ) 6:ohOtrttAiOS:i',:4ll'f?'‘,.l 41t* 1 .K4,;.i s' '.../^...ft#Ttiff.."- ..:ti.:!‘ir,&4l,seMillikt)/4 . " 4 tq't I: o "st 4 i, Vele ••;•• VI"; .1%1,14.. r V•Kr•rittre:' •,4f;•:4ov •••• . . t ../ p 2 ~...r. 0 • " Ze r'r,r • 5 ° Mana s Pizza *4 6) e . jj, c 6 and • Get a free topping • with any size pizza Try our homemade bread, do, subs and stromboli Free delivery Open at 11 COLOR PRINT FILM DEVELOPING Roll Sizes 126-110 12 exp. $1 99 24 ex p. $3 99 a n • From Kodak. Fuji or 20 exp. $G 4." • 3M color print film Offer valid Tenn State 4 / 2 3-30/84 Tool tore on campus .. . . riirmaimi VALUABLE COUPON . COLOR PRINT FILM DE VELOPING Disc Film 15 exp. $2 99 • From Kodak, Full or 3M color print film Tenn State Otter valid 4300€15_,S campus 4/23.30/84 OU•I COLOR PRINT FILM DEVELOPING Roll Size 135 12 exp. Si 99 36 exp.ss 99 99• From Kodak. Fuji or 24 exp. $3 • art color print film Offer valid Penn State 4/23.30/84 "6001 , S.tOre .5_ ixolx'•xxllllKEr zllr7f ~ '' SLIDE & MOVIE FILM DEVELOPING Si 49 20 exp. slides or • Kodak or Super 8 movies 1 g or 3 1 1 10 i si 99 36 ekrir slides color slide or Super 8 \ movies Offer vdild 'Penn State 4/23.30/84 `Bookstore • on campus Tenn State Ooolcqtore on campus Owned & °periled by the isenbsylvlnin Stile University The Daily Collegian Monday, April 23, 1984-3 Sub Shop 238-3112 418 Clay Lane Off College and N. Atherton VALUABLE COUPON