B—The Daily Collegian Thursday, Aug. 30,1984 I 1 Samaritan raises funds RHAB holds first meeting for impoverished family By KRISTINE SORCHILLA At first the supervisors said it was Collegian Staff Writer a fire hazard, but later the super- „ . . ... „ , . visors complained the tape ruined SYDNEY RUBIN mg to school the “rags” she finds at A student pointed out a problem the varnish on doors and caused Associated Press Writer the landfill. , .„ „ „• . . , ~ She works at the diimp every day, ' removal of a poster taped on a Tavlor RHAB director told ROMA, Texas - A New Jersey man hunting through garbage for items to umii nf a roo!ion™ htn and „. . ,! . »’ .. who read about the plight of a woman sell or use. The aluminum cans she SSSSSXSSSIS. s-T-S . , „ .. it n*j • “ 6 provide for her five children orga- source of income for feeding and ter s first Residence Hall Advisory sor because the student was not *\ , , „„„„ „ . „ nini,f in n/rniri .., . .. . , , nized a clothing drive and drove to clothing the children, ages 3to 9. Board meeting last night in McEl- responsible for the actual damage. ™ ~. . . / wain Hall. Also, some residence hall hall- .™l7 n P no Lthpr” u r Sutton called friends and neighbors Kim Cook, a representative ways are cluttered with boxes fc JLIZ" wL„!q„ asking for donations of clothes after from North Halls, said a housing from which students unpacked [!! wading the story. He then called the supervisor in North Halls recently belongings and then discarded, ™d a v °Therearea\otof’desiraS in fT pulled down a poster taped on a Gromada said. The boxes are i/S and vet County to whom he could send the wall instead of asking the student making passage in the hallways donations, who placed it there to remove it. difficult and are creating a fire o,;„® tn fn c farr , , . . When plaster pulled off the wall hazard she said „ Sut 4 ton , plan " ed to gO . to , the . Star T A church in Starr County agreed to along with the" tape, the student aKiL meeting, Taylor told an unemSeS Rio and di f ributa ““ was held responsible for the dam- the board to inform students that resident whose shmeeles another art . icl c e A" Z a . ntlC Clty ages. they are now being charged for Grande City resident whose struggles p res s about Sutton’s efforts gener- g Housing supervisors began oSmpus J™ tearing SSS ated additional contributions. ZnSonrs ohLoirsZfheend Those calls are not itemized and Ss weeks ago. “After the local newspaper article oHast soring semester Jennifer ra Jf s P® r c a Jl are | ,sted in the Navarro has been scavenging in the appeared, the whole thing just sud- Grimada RHAB secretly, said. said* P direCt ° ry ’ Starr County dump for clothes recy- denly took off,’’said Sutton “I wasn’t J bdlu - clable aluminum cans and change, prepared to handle all the clothes that She said her children would be wear- arrived. —————«g————i i;~ " : 1 . 1 " 1 = ■gnnnnj attention 4th-6th Semester R.N., Management Position Responsible for implementation of agency policies and ADWIIIIbTRATIUIi STUDENTS procedures regarding service delivery. R.N., B.S. degree, PA nursing license and 2 years supervisory experience required. _ r . , , . _ Community Health Nursing experience preferred. Pre-Professional Internship Program R.N.-SUPERVISOR OF PROFESSIONAL i et,l ? 9 v° r SERVICES & HOSPICE SERVICES 1 984 ‘ 1985 Academic Year B.S. with supervisory experience-experience in generalized , c Ino professional nursing with community health experience WGanGSCiay, oGptGITIDGr D, iyo4 preferred. PA nursing and driver’s licenses required. “An equal \ -7 no ; opportunity employer M/F/H.” rlUUp.m. ltT n n 105 Forum Building county CONTACT. . HB Hhnme health (355-1557 to request HB flHservice an application.) 11 ■ ■ . ■ DON’T DIE IN A FIVE GOOD REASONS TO USE TERMINAL LINE! KINKO3 PROFESSOR PUBLISHING Avoid the Fuss 1. can provide extra course materials. • me i uao, 2. There's no cost to you or your department. RAnt S* Td'lttill3l TtOWYI CSs 3. It's economical, convenient and effective for students. Get Your Own for Home . Best Rates Best Hardware South Hills Computers 224 W. College Ave. 1315 s. Across from Hammond Bid. V. Call 237-1317 for more information A NATIONWIDE NETWORK OF ELECTRONIC PRINTSHOPS America’s # 1 Instant Printer a- Identical copies ★ Top quality printing ★ Low, low prices * Dependable friendly service prints most anything— r i NA {i''W most often, ‘y • Announcements • Brochures • Bulletins S • Business Cards (SSSfUfJ* • Envelopes •Photocopies \ mm/mm mmsU) • Flyers • Tickets \/V\pv B UmJ • Invitations • Folding • Letterheads , •Drilling • Programs *00113(109 RzNI • Reports • Stapling LSLI LSJ • Resumes *OOlllO9 The'Whie-U'Wait'Printers! /pfu}...viY\eT9 people make the difference 444 E. College Ave. L State Colieae 234-6616 I (next to McDonalds) ' m , I ; 1 Hear "(j. ') ANOTHER CHANCE TO PICK UP j 1 OR 2 CREDITS \ STS 4978 Nuclear Arms Race Issues \ \ Course No. 000277,2 - 3 credits, T&R 3rd Period, 210 Ham- \ V \ Readings and discussions with physical scientists and i ,ma _ \ \ historians of the nuclear arms race, war, national defense, 1 fl\ \< ! global security and nuclear war prevention. . \ «, j-a Opett V Faculty: Paul W. Todd, Prof, of Biophysics and others. \ v \ \ Hours \ STS 498 A Technology, Health and Human Sexuality \ ggp/S V Course No. 000717,1 - 2 credits, R 15th Period, 212 Boucke \ 1 rtmeUtt eS * ; Technology’s impact on human longevity, the population \ • U* 11 explosion, the medicalization of society, and personal ~ ' \ I s - choices in the area of human sexuality. A « l' Faculty: Profs. Robert A. Walker, Rustum Roy and '--I • jr®***' 11 ' ■ \,r. distinguished off - campus visiting lecturers. /T ir fSLtnOHS* • * I, : i \ an .flome-i»a d * 1 Science, Technology and Society Program ' r , ; . i * _ Cre^ * I / 204 Materials Research Laboratory : -A ® i r ., ttuftS / Phone 865 - 9951 l • Stl . V ; I J: ((35 J ' Collegian ads really work. You’re wading this aren't you? BUS SERVICE Between Penn State University and Bloomsburg State University, Lehighton, Allentown and Bethlehem 1 LEAVING: State College FRIDAY* SUNDAY 154 N. Atherton Street 5:00 p.m. 8:30 p.m. % % Trallways Terminal ARRIVE: Bloomsburg, PA 6:50 p.m. 10:20 p.m. Lehighton, PA 8:30 pan. 12 mid. Allentown, PA 9:10 p.m. 12:40 aan. - Bethlehom, PA 9:25 pan. 12:55 aan. Notics: Ho service Sunday., Sept. 2. Service Monday, Sept. 3 follows Sunday schedules. < ' ' i __ Great Service and Reasonable Rates Designed with the Student in Mind! Saturday service will be limited to football weekends only I For further information call or stop in at: Trailways Terminal 238-7362 Service by Trans-Bridge Lanes, Inc. of Bethlehem * Day before holidays will fallow Friday Schedule. ★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★ I ★ GROUP ICE SKATING LESSONS ★ Fall classes beginning Sat. Sept. 1 .& Wed Sept. 5 ★ once-a-week (Sat. or Wed.) for 7 weeks ★ ★ • (7) 45 min. lessons • All levels • All ages, ★ ★ • Free admission to 5 two-hour public sessions ★ . ★ Only *30.00 Call 865-4102 ★ ★ ★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★ ' Every Thursday is THIRSTY THURSDAY at Pedro’s FREE with the purchase of $1.50 or more A » Limit one per customer PEDKITSa near corner # pTk t?' 1 1 1 1am : 1am of College & A Frl. &Sat. 11am-2am sun. 12 n00n.12 midnight and Garner Q, Cali 234-4725 for take-outs J EGNANCY TESTING Oakland—Rm. 212, 3520 Forbes Ave. Downtown—3rd floor, 107 6th St. • ABORTION SERVICES • BIRTH CONTROL & GYNE CARE For Your WHS SURVIVAL KIT, Fill Out & Mail Coupon To: Women's Health Services, 107 6th St., Pittsburgh, PA 15222 Telephone: (412) 562-1900 Name College (if student) Mail to: WHS, 107 6th St., Pittsburgh, PA 15222 FAREWELL! The members of R.P.M. wish to send out a sincere thank-you to all our friends and fans who’ve helped us for the past year. This Thursday, Aug. 30th, at the Scorpion will be our last performance together, so were going to kick-off the music at 9:30 pm and play until Brad falls off the stage again, giving us all plenty of time to get our final ya ya’s out. We’ll also be hav ing some of the people who’ve jammed with us in the past up for one more jam. So stop down, the doors open at 8:30 and there’s no cover ’til 10:30. We'd love to say Thanks In Person, ICE COLD Women's Health Services« WHS Survival Kit ROCK XlOOO Thursday at the Scorpion Doors Open at 8:30 pm 8:30-10:30 NO COVER 25* Drafts $1.50 Pitchers Band Starts at 9:30 10:30-11:30 50* Drafts. $l.OO Cover 11:30-? We’re not responsible i Education Is is an end in itself. 20 oz. SOFT DRINK sports .★ w ★s ★ ■ ★ * Rozier will remain with Maulers By The Associated Press Mike Rozier, the 1983 Heisman Trophy winner from Nebraska, won’t be leaving the USFL to play for. the Houston Oilers this season, Oilers General Manager Ladd Her zeg said yesterday. Rozier played with the USFL’s Pittsburgh Maulers last season but his agent, Art Wilkinson, had been negotiating with both clubrs to free the running back for the NFL Oil ers. “Art Wilkinson and Mike Rozier were not able to resolve their con tract settlement with the Maulers in time to meet the Oilers’ deadline of having Mike under contract with the Oilers for the 1984 season,” said Herzeg, who had set yesterday as the dealine. Rozier signed a three-year, $3.1 million contract with the Maulers. Veteran tackle Chris Ward was waived yesterday in a surprise move by the New York Jets because Coach' Joe Walton “wanted to go with young players.” “We wanted to go with Reggie McElroy at left tackle and we didn’t feel Chris would help us as a back up,” said Walton of his third-year The 28-year-old Ward, the Jets’ first-round draft choice and the fourth player taken in the 1978 NFL .draft, teamed with Marvin Powell as the “bookends” who powered a running attack that got the Jets to the AFC finals in 1982. He had been the Jets’ starting tackle for the past six years. But Ward consistently battled weight problems and even after training camp, he weighed in at 28i pounds, two pounds over his playing weight. On the other hand, Walton Moses extends streak to 109 By NESHA STARCEVIC Associated Press Writer KOBLENZ, West Germany (AP) -Two-time Olympic champion Ed win Moses, unbeaten since 1977, scored his 109th consecutive victo ry in the men’s 400-meter interme diate hurdles, clocking the world’s best time this year of 47.32 seconds at an international track and field meet here yesterday. While Moses was cruising to an easy triumph, Olympic gold med alists Valerie Brisco-Hooks of the United States and Said Aouita of Morocco also were posting victo ries, and Olympic champions Alon zo Babers and Roger Kingdom of the U.S. and Rolf Dannenberg of West Germany, along with world McEnroe By 808 GREENE AP Sports Writer NEW YORK - With top-seeded John McEnroe and Martina Navra tilova leading the way yesterday, the big guns blasted their way into the second round of the U.S. Open Tennis Championships with easy opening victories. Czechoslovakia’s Ivan Lendl, the No. 2 seed in the men’s singles, began the barrage, crushing Brian Teacher 6-4, 6-4,7-5. Then Navrati lova zapped fellow American Lea Antonoplis 6-4, 6-2 and McEnroe followed by defeating Britain’s Col in Dowdeswell 6-1, 6-1, 6-1. Jimmy Connors, the two-time defending champion and this year’s No. 3 seed, made his first appearance in this $2.55 million tournament last night when he faced fellow American Matt Mitch ell. McEnroe was magnificent as he bids to win his fourth U.S. Open title. Dowdeswell, a member of Britain’s Davis Cup team, was able to hold his own serve in the third game of the first set, the sixth game of the second and - the second game of the third. McEnroe did whatever he wanted and appeared to be at the top of his game in making his 1984 debut at Louis Armstrong Stadium. McEnroe is trying to capture his second straight Grand Slam title. Besides Navratilova, other seed ed women to advance to the second round included No. 4 Pam Shriver, No. 12 Bonnie Gadusek and No. 13 Wendy Turnbull of Australia. The men’s winners included No. 11 Juan Aguilera of Spain and No. 14 Anders Jarryd of Sweden. Shriver defeated Beverly Bowes 6-0, 6-1; Gadusek stopped Britain’s Annabel Croft 6-4, 6-4; Turnbull Pittsburgh Mauler running back Mike Rozier (30) runs for yardage in a game against Washington last spring. Rozier will stay in the USFL'next season now that his attempt to breach the final two years of his three-year, 3.1 million dollar contract failed. said, “McElroy came into camp in good physical condition and im proved this week.” _ Walton said he spent the last week looking to trade Ward, but found no takers. His release re duced the Jets roster to the 49-man limit wide receiver Wesley Walk er, who reported Monday after a record holder Calvin Smith of the U.S., were beaten. ' Inaddition, Johnny Gray, who had been the co-holder of the Amer ican record in the men’s 800, shat tered the mark with a time of 1:42.95. Moses was well below his Olym pic gold medal-winning time of 47.75 but was .30 of a second off his world record of 47.02 set on this track last year. Harald Schmid of West Ger many, the last man to beat Moses, finished second in 48.04, also faster than the time of 48.19 which won him the bronze medal at the Los Angeles Games. Brisco-Hooks, the Olympic champion in the women’s 200 and 400 plus a gold medalist in the 400- reaches 2nd round Second-seeded Chis Evert Lloyd returns a shot during her first-round match Tuesday night at the U.S. Open Tennis Championships in Flushing, New York. Lloyd defeated Sharon Walsh in straight sets, 6-0, 6-0. raced by Candy Reynolds 6-4, 6-1; Aguilera outlasted Hans Schwaier of West Germany 4-6,6-3,6-3,4-6, 6- 4; and Jarryd eliminated Austra lia’s John Frawley 6-4, 7-6, 6-4. Navratilova, seeking her sixth consecutive Grand Slam title and her second straight U.S. Open crown, didn’t find Antonoplis an easy touch. But after the left-hand er got in gear, catching her oppo nent at the net several times with ", Jh*f SM>W' : *# * holdout, had been kept under a special exemption for late reporting players. In other NFL developments, Ed die Lee Ivery was put on the injured reserve list by the Green Bay Pack ers, who said he had problems with his left knee. The assignment of the running back to the list for four meter relay, won the 100 in 11.08. Second was Diane Williams in 11.18, with Kathy Cook of Britain. Cook was followed by Olympic 100 silver medalist Alice Brown in 11.25 and Olympic 200 silver med alist Florence Griffith in 11.31. Aouita, the Olympic champion in the men’s 5,000, switched to the 1,- 500 meters and won in 3:34.10, edging Omar Khalifa of Sudan, the runner-up in 3:34.59, and Jose Abascal of Spain, the Olympic bronze medalist in the 1,500, third in 3:34.66. Babers, the Olympic champion in the men’s 400, was nipped by countryman Ray Armstead, 45.03 to 45.07, as Americans swept the first four places. Willie Smith was a close third in 45.09. perfectly placed lobs, Navratilova had too many weapons for Antono plis to counter. Navratilova jumped out to a 2-0 lead, only to have Antonoplis take the next two games and level the match. Lendl played his patented power ful baseline game, never, letting Teacher get into the match, al though they traded service breaks to begin the match. m '"'w „• ' Jjl jriffe - r ■■rm, 4<**m * * .'p jP**^ W imft ». -4 »'<• ' 12 M.i t,i 'Xn . ' weeks made room on the roster for nose tackle Bill Neill, who was obtained Tuesday after being re leased on waivers by the New York Giants. Chicago Bears General Manager Jerry Vainisi said his team took a pass this week on the services of running back Franco Harris. Padres shut out Phils, 2-0 ' By'RALPH BERNSTEIN AP Sports Writer PHILADELPHIA - Mark Thur mond pitched a three-hit shutout last night as the San Diego Padres stopped the Philadelphia Phillies’ scoring binge with a 2-0 victory. The Phillies had scored 30 runs in three games and 63 in the last eight but were shut down as Thurmond improved his record to 11-7 with his first major league shutout. John Denny allowed only four hits over eight innings for the Phillies, but fell to 6-5. . Thurmond retired the first 11 batters before Von Hayes singled and John Wockenfuss walked in the fourth. The only other Phillie hits were a single by John Russell in the fifth and a single by Ivan DeJesus in the eighth. Thurmond walked one and struck out two. The Padres took a 1-0 lead in the first. Alan Wiggins singled and stole his 56th base of the season. Tony Gwynn singled him to third and Wiggins scored on a double play grounder by Steve Garvey. The Padres made it 2-0 in the seventh on a leadoff double by Graig Nettles, an infield out and Kevin Mcßeynolds’ sacrifice fly. Garvey played his 131st consec utive game without an error to tie a major league record for errorless games at first in one season set by Frank McCormick of Cincinnati in 1946. The record over two seasons is 178 by Mike Hegan. Garvey has 159 straight errorless games dating back to 1983. Cubs 7 Reds 2 CHICAGO (AP) —Leon Durham drove in three runs with a homer and a single and Bob Dernier broke an 0-for-20 slump with a home run yesterday to lead Rick Sutcliffe and the first-place Chicago Cubs to a 7-2 victory over the Cincinnati Reds. The triumph was the fourth straight for the Cubs while Sut cliffe, 13-1 since being acquired from Cleveland June 13, posted his 11th straight victory. Ryne Sandberg banged out three hits, including a double and a triple. Sandberg doubled in the first inning and scored on a single by Keith Moreland but the Reds tied it in the second on a double by Brad Gulden and a single by Wayne Krenchicki. The Cubs broke it open with four runs in the third. Dernier led off with his third homer off Jeff Rus sell, 6-15. Gary Matthews walked and Durham followed with his 20th homer. A pair of walks and a dou ble by Jody Davis accounted for the other run. The Cubs picked up another run in the fourth on singles by Dernier, ,v» >\ <v *, ■' **. "Si Unknown, undefeated Thomas looking to upset Witherspoon By TIM DAHLBERG AP Sports Writer LAS VEGAS, Nev. - Pinklon Thomas, undefeated in 25 fights with 20 knockouts, is still a virtual unknown going into tomorrow’s heavyweight title fight against Tim Witherspoon. “He’s the best kept secret around,” said veteran trainer An gelo Dundee, who signed on with Thomas for the fight. “People don’t know Pinklon 1 , but he’s got tons of ability and he’s a great guy to boot.” Thomas hopes his scheduled 12- round performance against With erspoon for the World Boxing Council title will finally put him in the spotlight in the confused world of heavyweight boxing where three different fighters claim championships. . “They don’t really know Pinklon Thomas yet because I haven’t had the exposure,” said the boxer, Whose impressive record includes a draw with World Boxing Asso ciation champion Gerrie Coetzee. “They might start knowing who I am after I win the title Friday night.” Thomas, 26, who now lives in Philadelphia,, literally fought his way past an addiction to heroin that had plagued him since his teens in Detroit. His slow climb up the heavyweight ladder nearly seven years later will finally-cul minate in a title shot. . “It’s his job to hold his title and my job to take it,” said Thomas. “I think my job will be a little harder, but my whole life has been harder. It’s just been a tough go, that’s all.” If he wins, Thomas plans to give California Angels’ Dick Schofield (22) reaches first base safely as Baltimore Orioles’ first baseman Eddie Murray stretches for an errant throw during fifth inning action yesterday in Anaheim. California beat the Orioles 7-5. Sandberg and Durham. Thad Bosley singled in another run in the eighth. Sutcliffe yielded another run in the sixth when Pete Rose singled, went to second on a wild pitch and scored on a single by Dave Parker. Angels 7 Orioles 5 ANAHEIM, Calif. CAP) -'Fred Lynn and Brian Downing hit con secutive solo homers with two out in the eighth inning to lead the California Angels to a 7-5 victory over the Baltimore Orioles yester day. Both homers came off Mike Bod dicker, 16-9, and snapped a 5-5 tie that the Orioles had forged in the top of the inning. Lynn’s was his 16th, and Downing hit his 18th. Baltimore had tied it 5-5 in the eighth when Angels starter Mike Witt walked Cal Ripken Jr. and Eddie Murray with one out. After Doug Corbett relieved Witt, desig nated hitter Joe Nolan stroked a two-out RBI single, scoring Rip ken. Corbett, 4-1, pitched the final 1 2- 3 innings to gain the victory. Rob Wilfong had hit a three-run homer in the fifth inning as Califor nia erased a 4-0 deficit to lead 5-4. Wilfong’s homer off Mike Bod dicker, 16-9, came with two out and The Daily Collegian Thursday, Aug. 30, 1984 the title belt to his son, Pinklon 111, as ah eighth birthday present. Actually, Thomas has has more fights than Witherspoon although he has never figured prominently in the title picture. A quick punch er with a good left jab, he has also displayed lots of power in running up his impressive knockout re cord. “I feel I have more experience if you compare the guys I’ve fought with the guys he’s fought,” Thom as said. “I’ve always thought I had the potential to win the title, it was just a matter of doing the right things —getting enough sleep, eat ing right and staying away from the drugs.” Witherspoon, also 26, won the WBC crown in March with a 12- round decision over Greg Page for the title undefeated Larry Holmes vacated in a dispute with promot er Don King. The Philadelphia fighter, who became prominent on the heavy-' weight scene when he dropped a controversial split decision to Holmes, also suffers from the same lack of recognition from most of the boxing public that still considers Holmes the only true heavyweight champion. Even promoter Don King, who was embroiled in a money dispute with Witherspoon that prompted the champion to threaten to pull out of the fight earlier in the week, admits to as much. “As long as he (Holmes) is out there, he’s got to be considered the heavyweight champion of the world,” King said. Witherspoon is scheduled to get $450,000 for the fight although he says he’ll be lucky to clear $50,000, after Dick Schofield and Juan Beni quez has singled. It was Wilfong’s fifth of the season. A 1 Bumbry opened the Orioles’ four-run first with a single and moved to second on John Shelby’s sacrifice. Murray now has 102 RBI this season, the third major leaguer to go over the 100 mark this year. Oakland’s Dave Kingman, with 108 and Boston’s Jim Rice, with 100, are the others. Giants 4 Expos 3 MONTREAL (AP) - Bob Brenly led off the 11th inning with an inside-the-park home run, enabling the San Francisco Giants to defeat Montreal 4-3 last night and send the Expos to their sixth straight de feat, all by one run. Brenly sent the first pitch by reliever Dick Grapenthin, 0-2, on the fly to right-center field. Center fielder Tim Raines tried for a div ing catch, but the ball squirted out of his glove and rolled to the fence as Brenly rounded the bases for his 19th homer. It was the first inside-the-park homer by a Giants player since Larry Herndon did it Sept. 22,1981. Greg Minton, 2-8, the fifth Giants pitcher, earned the victory with two innings of relief. 4 /*' i • * 1 ?* ** ,i AP Laserphoto
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