2—The Daily Collegian Thursday, Aug. 30, 1984 Eatery offers wide choice of new culinary creations By TIM EYSTER Collegian Staff Writer Although one cannot munch on its outside walls, there is still plenty of food and drink to be found inside the Gingerbread Man, a restaurant that opened during the summer. Located at 130 Hiester St., the Gin gerbread Man offers more than 100 varieties of sandwiches, quiches, omelets, salads, dinners, soups and desserts, and features Greek, Mexi can, Italian and deli-style meals, said owner John Cocolin. The business also sells five differ ent types of draft beer plus a wide variety of domestic and imported beers and mixed drinks, including several house specialties, he said. ‘As soon as (customers) walk in they can really get a feel for the atmosphere of the restaurant. It’s casual, but there’s , something elegant about it.’ Susan Denny, waitress at the Gingerbread Man Snacks available at the Gin gerbread Man include french fries with cheese, onion rings, sausage and honey, french bread pizza, fried moz zarella cheese, potato skins and an assorted raw vegetable platter called a “munchy-crunchy,” he said. Happy hours, when drinks can be purchased at half price, are from 3 to 7 p.m. daily, Cocolin said. Lunch, at the Grinder Tavern is spepial.... special enough to enjoy every day. A big menu with a wide variety of salads, sandwiches, omelettes and more. You'll never get tired of the Grinder's food or affordability. The Gingerbread Man also offers domestic drafts at half price on Tues days and Thursdays, he added. Daily luncheon and dinner specials will be offered soon, he said. The Gingerbread Man is decorated in California garden style with an abundance of plants, glass and brass. Susan Denny (junior-communica tions and business), a waitress at the restaurant, said the atmosphere adds to the restaurant’s appeal. “As soon as (customers) walk in they can really get a feel for the atmosphere of the restaurant. It’s casual, but there’s something elegant about it,” she said. Customer reaction to the business, which opened July 12, seemed posi tive. Sara Ray (sophomore-chemistry), who was visiting the establishment for the first time, said she enjoyed her meal and the atmosphere, which she described as relaxed and pleas ant. The Gingerbread Man offers a wider variety of foods than other restaurants, Ray added. State College residents Gerry John son and Nancy Ghaner also said the business had a very good variety of food and an attractive interior. The Gingerbread Man is open daily from 11 a.m. to 2 a.m. and food can be purchased from 11 a.m. to midnight Sunday through Thursday and 11 a.m. to 1 a.m. Fridays and Saturdays. In addition to the State College location, there are four Gingerbread Man establishments in the Harris burg area. immr\ fill mu Mornings are brighter with The Daily Collegian country ravem 825 crlcklewood drive • toftrees 237-1049 Bartender Dwane Doppelheuer (seplor-Prelaw) arranges Items at the bar of the Gingerbread Man, State College’s newest eatery and night spot. collegian notes • The Penn State Cycling Club will meet at 8 tonight in 308 Willard. • Eco-Action will meet at 8 tonight in 225 HUB. • The Gymnastics Club will meet at 7 tonight in 106 White Building. • The Penn State Flying Lions will sponsor a film on soaring at 7:30 tonight in 216 Hammond. • The University Concert Commit tee will meet at 6:30 tonight in 217 Willard. New members are welcome. • The Microcomputer Information and Support Center will sponsor Intel Vendor Day from 1 to 4 today in 101 Computer Building. • The Student Counselors will hold a study skills workshop at 4 today in 319 HUB. • Pattee will hold orientation tours l for graduate students at 10, 2 and 4 ! today. URTCI9B4-85 Season Much Ado About Nothing By William Shakespeare Children of a Lesser God By Mark Medoff The Beaux Stratagem By George Farquhar A History of The American Film Book and Lyrics by Christopher Durang Music by Mel Marvin Call the Subscriber’s Hotline at 865-1884 Now is a great time for a new taste of the Grinder Tavern Fifth of July By Lanford Wilson • The HUB Craft Center will spon sor an open house from 7:30 to 9:30 tonight in 312 HUB. • The Indoor Winter Guard Asso ciation will meet at 6:30 tonight in the lobby of White Building. • The Block, and Bridle Club will sponsor a faculty-student mixer for all students interested in livestock and farming at 6:30 tonight in the HtJB Main Lounge. • Kappa Phi, Christian service sorority will meet at 6:30 tonight in the suite of the Wesley Foundation Building, 256 E. College Ave. • Registration for the Sept. 29 LSAT Test ends today. Students inter ested in taking the test can pick Up up an LSAT packet in 107 Burrowes Building. REAS mom 118 UJ. College five., half-block west of the Corner Room OPCN 6VCRVDRV MON.-FRI. 9:30 R.M.-9:00 P:M. SRT. 9:30-6 SUN. 12-5 OPEN THURSDAY UNTIL 8:30 *§[\ MONDAY THRU SATURDAY 10:00 to 6:00 FALL REVIEW OF STEREO TECHNOLOGY WELCOME To Paul & Tony’s Fall Preview of Today's Advanced Stereo Technology. Dozens of New Models by Quality’ Hi-Fi Manufacturers including Sansui, Akai, Sony Home Audio,, Panasonic, Audio Control, Acoustic Research, TDK, Maxell, Discwasher, Audio Technlca, Koss, Clarion, Sony Autosound and more. Sale Prices Sforewide. An Incredible Selection of Personal Portable Stereo Headphones and Hi-Fi Accessories all On Sale Nov/!!! Quality Car Stereo and Professional Installation is available for both domestic and foreign cars, large and small. Special Dual Voltage Models for International Students include Portables and Home Audio. NEW MODELS.....at SALE PRICES Open late until 8:30 Thursdays. Monday thru Saturday 10:00 to 6:00. SONY...NEW...PSLX 5511... Linear Track, , Direct Drive, P-Mount Tone Arm, Fully Automatic Control, Cueing,-Quartz lock out front controls and very compact .....*149" ingredient MiWtZ * LQ€ PR€WRSH€D J€RNS sizes 2r snv€ $4 M€N'S sizes .“.vr $ 18" SflV€ $5 STUDENTS' JUNIOR SIZCS... COTLCR TWILL, KCNNINGTON CORDS GCNCRRR SPORT PRNTS. $5 in Free Music Money Redeemable at National Record Mart for €very $5O Purchase at Main Ingredient SAL€ CNDSSCPT. 3rd It’s a Sony, and it’s on sa We stock and display a Full Line of Quality SONY HOME AUDIO PRODUCTS maxnlianC9o sammat $ 2l" SflV€ $5 *l9" *flV€ $6 *l9" SfIVC $6 $ l9" SAV€ $4 USEG to hear USG strategy By STEVE WILSON Collegian Staff Writer Undergraduate Student Govern ment President Adam Levinson will present USG’s plan to help the University get more state appro priations at tonight’s University Student Executive Committee meeting. The “three-pronged attack” in volves lobbying state legislators in Harrisburg and holding a student voter registration and turnout drive to make the student vote more influential, said Levinson, who is also the USEC president. USEC voted to support the lob bying effort and registration drive over the summer, and tonight’s report will update USEC and stu dents on the plan, Levinson said. USEC is not expected to take any official action tonight. The meeting will be held 6:30 tonight in 307 HUB.' Bikers beware of Fraser Road Students who are tempted to ride their bicycles the wrong way down Fraser Road or to run the stop signs at its intersection with Pollock Road had better beware. University police are cracking down on violators at Fraser Road,, a one-way street connecting Poilock Road to Curtin Road, by issuing Uni versity tickets with a $5 fine per violation, said Stewart Neff, a Uni versity Police Services supervisor. “It seems that a lot of people aren’t aware that a bike is a vehicle and must abide by the vehicle code,” Neff said. Fraser Road is a high violation area, and it would be easy for an r - TSjni i Pedro‘sv£\|i i I s S Pie 8 i $2.99 sr 8 I Beef and rice, mushrooms, B ■ tomatoes, cheese and sauce, m ■ m all baked together in a crispy, ■ crunchy, edible bowl. Served | y with chips, sauce, and sour ■ ■ cream. S £ * good for one order with “ ■ coupon only thru 9/5/84. A ■ ||v 8 IrPEDIUn* 8 IMon-Thurs. 11am-lam 131 S. Gamer B Frl.&Sat. 11ajn-2am near comer . | y Sun. 12 noon-12 midnight of College & ■ Phone 234-4725 fortake-ouls Garner. SAVE AT ELEK-TEK Texas Instruments $ BA-2 $33 Ejj TI-55-2 $33 TI-MBA 25 fBW T1:57 22 BA-55 43 SB/ TI-LCO-PHOG 50 BA-55 Ti ' 66 52 ELSIOOT . $43 Bn PC 1250 A $BO EL 5500 T -70 smarP CE 125 119 CEI2EP . . .55 ■■■! PCISOOA 160 ELSI2T 28 CE 150 165 HEWLETT-PACKARD LCD PROBLEM SOLVERS HP-11C Scientific $56 HP-15C Scientific.. 90 HP-12C Financial 90 HP-16C Programmer , 90 HP-41CV $l6B HP-4KX 245 Optical Wand • ... 95 Card Reader 145 Printer (82143 A) 283 395 .335 HP-41CV 375 * $l6B 600 , ' HP-II ACaSSORICS HP-ll Module".... HP-ILPrinter/Plotter Acoustic Modem Dig Cassette Drive . Think Jet Printer DS/D D Disk Drive lag TOU FREE ORDER LINE 800x621*1269: • EXCEPT lllinois, AloikO' Howoii Aunwitt diMwnlid too UaitiKord « Vuo by mat! or phono UaiKoiliitr'i Oiitk, Honijt Ord. f«n Chirk (2 ■kit? (It) SarryriiCOO.l Add S 4 00 hi ilim $1 00 is add'l ih?j I hondl. Shprt lo II addritt add /4b laa fruit wb| lothaigi WlfTI (■• call*) Urfr»«(«lil*f. Jo*dajrm*T*p*H<7 Once in the morning does it. Read a Collegian and share it with a friend. In other business, USEC will discuss how to nominate responsi ble students who will serve as representatives on three Universi ty committees, Levinson said. USEC will nominate four stu dents to the Presidents Committee for Planning and Budget (the Uni versity will determine which two of the four will sit on the commit tee). USEC will also nominate four students to the Discrimination Ap peals Board and one junior to the Commencement Planning Com mittee. In addition, USEC will nominate two students to the President’s Strategic Planning Committee be cause Shelly Phillips, the sole un dergraduate on the committee, resigned, Levinson said. The Uni versity will choose which of the two students will sit on the com mittee, he added. All interested students may at tend the USEC meeting. accident to occur there, especially if the area is congested with cars and pedestrians, he said. The crackdown is basically a safety factor, Neff said. The police have issued about 25 tickets per day since Tuesday, he said. Neff noted that by law, violators could be given a $42 state citation that would put points on the drivers’ li censes and would have to be paid at the district magistrate’s office. The officers also check to see if the bicycles they stop are registered for the current year, he said. Failure to register a bicycle results in a $5 fine. Neff said people may register their bicycles for free Monday through WHAT EVERY STUDENT SHOULD KNOW ABOUT THE DIFFERENCES BETW EN LEASING A TELEPHONE AND Yes, there are differences. And we think you should know what they are. Ask yourself these questions. WHEN YOU LEASE A CHICKEN, DO YOU GET THREE MONTHS FREE DURING THE SUMMER? Probably not. But when you lease your telephone from AT&T this fall, you won’t pay any lease charges next summer. You can use your phone at home, and bring it back to school in the fall. DO LEASED CHICKENS COME IN A SELECTION OF COLORS AND STYLES? No. Chickens don’t come in many colors. But the AT&T telephone you lease this fall comes in a variety of colors and three popular styles. ARE LEASED CHICKENS REPAIRED FREE? Don’t kid yourself. Repairing a chicken is a delicate process that requires the work of expensive professionals. However, in the off chance your AT&T leased telephone needs repairs, we’ll fix it absolutely free when you visit any of our AT&T Phone Centers. ARE LEASED CHICKENS SHIPPED DIRECTLY TO YOU? Ship a chicken? Don’t be silly. However, your AT&T leased Call The Toll Free Number Listed Above Valid with the following restrictions: 1. You must be registered for 12 accredited hours for the 1984 fall term. 2. Valid only to students billed by AT&T Consumer Sales and Service. 3. Delinquent accounts are void from offer. 4. Limit two telephones per account. 5. Offer expires 72 months from Idase initiation date. 6. This offer is not valid for permanent year-round resident students. 7. The three free months will not begin until you have paid for the first nine months of your lease. 8. All telephones are FCC registered. We provide repair service for all telephones sold at AT&T Phone Centers. Only telephones equipped with Touchtone dialing can access certain long distance services and networks. © Copyright. AT&T Consumer Sales and Service 1984. Herman flexes campaign muscles By PATTI DIACONT Collegian Staff Writer State Rep. Lynn Herman, R- Centre, said keeping in close contact with his constituents in the 77th dis trict will be an important part of his campaign for re-election in Novem ber. “I am going to run a very active and aggressive race, regardless of what my opponents do,” he said, emphasizing that he has spent much of his time visiting the district and has attended as many public func tions as possible. Herman, 27, of Philipsburg, will be running against Democratic candi date Annabelle Wenzke and Consum er party candidate Tom Ortenberg, both of State College. Herman said his main goal, if re elected, is .to serve his constituents “as I have in the past.” Herman, a member of the state House education committee, 'added that his most important accomplish- Friday at information booths on cam pus. To register, students need their identification cards and bicycles, he said. University police will begin crack ing down next week on students Who have not registered their bicycles, Neff added. Ellyn Fleming (senior-marketing) is one student who received a ticket yesterday. “I won’t do it again, I learned my lesson. We’re supposed to obey laws just like cars,” she said. Neff said students should pay their fines at the University Parking Office in 125 Grange. —by Kim Bower ments are his efforts to increase appropriations to the University and to keep Lincoln University, in Oxford, Pa., from becoming a land grant university similar to Penn State. “I have worked very hard to thwart that decision because I think Penn State should deserve singular sta tus,” he pointed out. A bill that would have made Lin coln University a land grant insititu tion would have taken funds away from Penn State, he said. The bill did not pass the state House of Represen tatives when it was introduced in 1983. “I believe my strongest assets are that I have been visiting constituents in my district, including the HUB at the University,” he said. “I feel these meetings (at the HUB) are important GO GREEK GO GREEK GO GREEK GO GREEK GO GREEK GO GREEK GO D 70 m m SORORITY RUSH MIXER August 3 0 Come find out why. . . It’s Great to be Greek R 154 7% GO GREEK GO GREEK GO GREEK GO GREEK GO GREEK GO GREEK GO GREEK telephone will be shipped directly to you after one call to 1-800-555-8111, or you can pick up your phone at any of our AT&T Phone Centers. ONE FINAL QUESTION: DOES IT COST THE SAME TO LEASE A CHICKEN AS TO LEASE A TELEPHONE THIS FALL? Hardly. While we have no hard data on the exact cost of leasing a chicken, we can tell you with some certainty that the cost of leasing a telephone this fall is far less than you might think. The decision to lease a chicken or a telephone, of course, rests with you. But should you opt for the tele phone, remember: you get three months free next summer, and you can take the phone home with you. There’s a choice of colors and styles, free repair, and we’ll > ship you the phone or you can pick itupatany of our AT&T Phone Centers. It doesn’t cost much either. And Sm that’s something to crow about. .T .SS AT&T Consumer Sales and Service. To order your telephone, call 1-800-555-8111 for delivery right to your door or for information concerning AT&T Phone Center locations. in order to be accessible to students and the employees of the Universi ty.” Besides serving on the state House education committee, Herman is a member of the professional licensure committee. He received bachelor degrees in political science and history from the University of Pittsburgh. He also completed a masters program in public administration in 1980 at Pitt. The 77th district includes the bo roughs of State College, Philipsburg, South Philipsburg and Port Matilda, and Ferguson, Halfmoon, Huston, Rush, Taylor and Worth townships. The district also includes the Clear field County boroughs of Chester Hill and Osceola. “It’s to Gr 7-10 p.m. w^. The Daily Collegian Thursday, Aug. 30, 1984—3 State Rep. Lynn Herman HUB Ballroom AT&T
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