opinions editorial opinion Misplaced priorities A year ago tomorrow, America lost its Miss to Penthouse and now our conception of Madonna is no longer immaculate. At a time when South Africans are fight ing for their rights, nuclear threats are made, innocent men and women are used as political bargining chips by terrorists the news of Madonna's indiscretions make headlines. Why? Why should it be news? Because people are interested. With front-page articles and headlines reminiscent of the gossipy tabloids littering the sides, of checkout counters, it seems people have shown more interest in a public display of dirty laundry than real issues. Last week Penthouse and Playboy mag azines released pictures of Madonna in the buff, and although she was reported saying that she does not find the photos important, many people think the contrary. On July 23, 1984, Vanessa Williams the 57th Miss America surrendered her title, rather than damage the image of the Miss America Pageant, as people rushed to newsstands to see her stripped of more than just her title. Without question, some people have and will continue to argue that these matters do not belong in major national newspapers, and without question, others will contend they do. So far, the Madonna expose has taken the front pages and centerfolds of newspapers 7 1 gik 1 = '' 1 r' "THE PEKITAGO4S $286 Si 1.-1-1 ON A6N-1120W Live Aid: The concert only proves that both "They came together to feed the world." Dick Clark summed up the whole day with that statement. Over 100,000 people in Philadelphia, 72,000 in London, and as many as 1.5 billion around the world united, if only for a day, and tried to save the world. Some estimates of the amount of money raised go as high as $7O million. AT&T, who provided a toll-free number for people to call and pledge donations, said that phone lines were flooded with calls for days after the event had ended. Bob Geldof, the originator of the idea behind Live Aid, gathered the greatest rock n' roll entertainers around, and reunited some older ones from another era. Though most of the people involved in the production tried to deny any similarities between Live Aid and Woodstock, the com- ~~ ~~ and magazines across the nation for the past two weeks. And although there are more important news stories on more crucial matters con cerning the future of our nation, public interest in the story behind Madonna strip ping for all to see has become important because enough Americans want to see it. Playboy and Penthouse executives are ben efitting from Madonna's full coverage only because millions of Americans buy the issues. When people want to know about trivial items, the press is doing its job in letting the public know the details. But no matter what newspapers or the public consider newsworthy, Americans must not allow their priorities to be set by scandalous ravings of issues that, in the end, are unimportant. Although the harsh reality of war, famine and discrimination are not ,the happiest or most entertaining of news items, these problems must remain in the foreground of our thoughts and actions if they are ever to be solved. What people want to know that Madon na stands proud with or without clothes is entertaining and to some extent news worthy. But such an issue should not over shadow more vital issues. What people need to know —what's happening in South Africa, what has been decided in Geneva or what will result from the hostage's release is news. parisons were impossible to avoid. Bob Dylan and Joan Baez, two figures who symbolize the activism of the 19605; per formed at Live Aid. Crosby, Stills, and Nash, The Who and several other bands who played at the 1969 event in New York, were also in Philadel phia for this show. But what took place on July 13, 1985 was more than an effort to help the starving people in Africa. It was the event that will go down in history as our generation's reply to the criticisms dealt to us concerning our apathetic attitudes and self-absorbed life styles. Philadelphia officials publicly com mented how pleased the city was that drugs, violence, and pandemonium were almost non-existent during the event. In an age that has seen concert goers trampled to death and drug use reaching higher proportions in younger people, a peaceful gathering of 100,000 rock music fans is an occasion to be proud. Our generation has born the weight of some harsh criticisms. Many of them are well earned. We believe drunken drivers should be prosecuted but view driving drunk as an unfortunate consequence to a Friday night out and so we persist in doing it because we 414 4 .- ---- _ , .••• • " ' t .' 4 4' 4 0 4 • ••• • Y m ie ,1 •Il •••••••-- Jr4o o ki#1 4,0. 41! ftyWom Ana -4110.0. idealism and hope are very alive in today's society don't want to pay for a taxicab home. We'll spend $25 a week on pot or veg out in front of MTV for three hours at a time but when a professor suggests we should buy the study guide for his class we say we can't afford the extra $lO. Yes, we have deserved many of the eggs thrown in our face. And for a while we didn't even think to duck when they were thrown. But Live Aid has opened a door for us that we thought was closed. We survived the "me decade" and the defining of a new sector known as the "yuppy" and issued a statement to the world proclaiming, "Idealism is alive. We care about the rest of the world and we want to help." The 1970 s was not an easy tome for us. Watergate, OPEC, Iran, skyjackings. We had to face a plethora of issues that our parents' either didn't face until they were older or never had to face at all. And being exposed to these issues at a young age influenced our outlook on the world. We're a little more cynical about the problems that our parents' say we should be concerned about. We worry more about how much tuition is going up than about the nuclear waste site being proposed for Penn sylvania. We're a lot less serious about many things \ S \V ‘‘ g ‘‘\\f kV ‘ rA 4 ‘ , ' ,ssk. \‘‘, \ \ ‘'"'"V‘ • k\A: 4 \ „Cs ,`,\ \ reader opinion What a gift It must be Christmas at Penn State as the administration is bestowing its students with numerous gifts. One day before the bill arrives, I hear that tuition is to increase yet again. As I read through the bill, I thank my lucky stars that I am not a science major. Today I open my Weekly Collegian to find yet another surprise - the administration wants to convert Beam Hall into office and classroom space! I congratulate the timing of your decisions - most of the students are away earning money for school next fall. I also congratulate your successful avoidance to student input. However, all things aside, what do you, the administrators, intend to do with 400 students that will be displaced pending a convsersion of Beam Hall? Maybe we could convert Old Main into a dormitory again, and shift the administration to Beaver Stadium? What do you think? It's summer time and there are many hot issues facing Happy Valley. If you would like to speak out and voice your opinions to faculty, staff or students, write a letter-to-the-editor with your gripe. The Daily Collegian's editorial editor welcomes the opinions of students, faculty, staff and area residents about issues and topics of interest to the Collegian's II Board of Managers Assistant Business Manager: da th il e y Collegian Karen Jaret; Sales Manager: Roger Kuhlman; Account• ing Manager: Michael Glldea; Marketing Manager: Sarah Boughton; Office Manager: Wendy Metzger; National Advertising Manager: Roland Deal Jr.; Layout Coordina• tor: Corinne Salameh. ' Gall L. Johnson The Daily Collegian's editorial opinion is determined by its Board of Opinion, with the editor holding final responsibility. Opinions expressed on the editorial pages are not necessarily those of The Daily Collegian, Collegian Inc. or The Pennsylvania State University. Collegian Inc., publishers of The Daily Collegian and related publications, is a separate corporate institution from Penn State. Board of Editors Managing Editor: Terry Mutchler; Assistant Managing Editor: Jeanette Krebs; News Edi tors: Christine Kay, Patrick Collier; Sports Editor: Mark Ashenfelter; Assistant Sports Editor: Rich Douma; Photo Editor: Jeff Bustraan; Arts Editor: Pat Grandjean; Graph ics Editor: Tony Ciccarelli; Science Editor: Nan Arens; Copy Editors: Pete Baratta, Phil Galewitz and Colleen Barry; Contributing Editor: Bill Cramer. Monday, July 22, 1985 019 8 5 Collegian Inc. Michael A. Meyers Business Manager and we have a unique way of justifing what we see as our faults. For example, the fact that the Reagan Administration is heading dangerously to the right doesn't bother a lot of us because we're satisfied with the relatively low un employment and interest rates, two eco nomic factors that determine what we may be doing in the future. More than any other generation, we are a product of an environment that underwent rapid changes before we were ready to deal with them. Just when we thought we were beginning to understand the workings of the political process, the government of the early '7os threw a wrench into our engine. Elementary school taught us about hones ty and our great political system of checks and balances. Then, from our living room's, we witnessed the courtroom drama of cor ruption in government and the first presi dent to ever resign. We are a generation that holds grudges. All politicians are suspect and cheating at any level of business doesn't surprise us. We marvel at the technology of the corn puter, age only to hear about new ways to commit crimes with them. Our preoccupation in the "me" syndrome The Daily Collegian Monday, July 22, 1985 We, the students, are not so misguided that we cannot see a good idea from a bad one. These past two years have been productive in many ways - such as improvement of Dorm Contract Acceptance. ARHS has done much to improve student life on campus. Orientation has, also, improved by student input to hopefully better aid fresh men. Even the new Dining Hall system has been prevent ed from cutting its own throat (by not letting the dining halls be open to any student thereby causing complete chaos in areas such as West Halls) by student input. Occassionally, we students do come up with feasible ideas; and its about time the administration acknowl edges our ingenuity as students who are capable of matching the administration's strange solutions. You never know - we might come up with a good one! readership. Letters-to-the-editor should be typed, dou ble-spaced and must be submitted with the author's name, phone number, semester and major. They must be presented with identification in 126 Carnegie Build ing. The Daily Collegian reserves the right to edit letters-to-the-editor. All letters become the property of- Collegian, Inc. So, instead of just complaining at dinner about what issues and problems are facing Happy Valley, do • something constructive write a letter-to-the-editor. Letters Policy: The Daily Collegian encourages com• ments on news coverage, editorial policy and University affairs. Letters should be typewritten, double-spaced, signed by no more than two people and not longer than 30 lines. Students' letters should include the term, major and campus of the writer. Letters from alumni should include the major and year of graduation of the writer. All writers should provide their address and phone number for verification of the letter. The Collegian reserves the right to edit letters for length and to reject letters if they are libelous or do not conform to standards of good taste. Because of the number of letters received, the Collegian cannot guar antee publication of all the letters it receives. Mall letters to: The Daily Collegian; 126 Carnegie Build ing; University Park, Pa. 16802. Names may be withheld on request. Letters may also be selected for publication in The Weekly Collegian. Complaints: News and editorial complaints should be presented to the editor. Business and advertising com• plaints should be presented to the business manager. is overiealous at times, but we're not totally responsible. We've been brought up with books like, "Looking Out For Number One," and movies like, "Rocky," that ap plaud the struggle of the individual. Even our universities are partly responsi ble for the direction we have taken. We're continuously shown the virtues of integrat ing mathematics into any discipline but given only 12 credits of electives in which to learn about culture, philosophy, or any of the other courses that help to make us better people. Live Aid is our first attempt at making our world a better place to live. If you saw the end of Live Aid, when all the performers gathered onstage to sing,"We Are The World," and if you felt the roar of the crowd as they joined in, then you were part of an event, a unified effort that our generation has not experienced before. Ride the momentum that Live Aid has provided us with. It was just the boost that our generation has needed. And to the 172,000 people who gathered at JFK stadium in Philadelphia and Wembley stadium in London: Thank you. Michael Kutner is a senior majoring in finance and a columnist for The Daily Collegian. His column appears every Mon day. • s 'ft \Z \N Alison Jones, senior-history July 17 Soc. Sec. 'goes computer' By CHRISTOPHER CONNELL Associated Press Writer BALTIMORE It's a scene fa miliar to anyone who has been in a bank, stock brokerage or travel agency recently: Customers sit across from staff members who handle an entire transaction on desktop computer terminals. But this scene takes place in a Social Security office, and the agency's leader says it is the first step toward better, faster service that the public can expect nation wide by 1988. The agency has begun taking benefit applications directly on ter minals at its main downtown office here and in York. The equipment will be installed in 18 more offices from Brooklyn, N.Y., to Wenatchee, Wash., by late autumn, and in all 1,350 Social Security offices within three years, Acting Commissioner Martha Mc- Steen said. The agency, under fire a few years ago from congressional in vestigators for being too timid 'in joining the computer revolution, embarked on a five-year, $5OO mil lion modernization program in 1982. McSteen said the public is al ready realizing benefits. It takes only 10 days, down from three weeks, to issue new Social Security cards, she says, and there are fewer disruptions at headquarters in suburban Woodlawn, where gi ant computers keep track of the earnings of 123 million Americans and pay benefits to 37 million oth ers. Mel Gibson Returns As: MAD MAX BEYOND THUNDERDOME ,00.13 DAILY: 1:30, 3:35, 5:40, 7:45, 9:50 All Seats $2.00 Before 6:00 p.m. Michael J. Fox & Christopher Lloyd BACK TO THE FUTURE PO DAILY: 1:40, 3:45, 5:50, 7:55, 10:00 All Seats 32.00 Before 6:00 p.m. UTh3=!!MM:n Ron Howards COCOON MIS NIGHTLY: 7:45, 9:45 • STATE 125 W. C.U.Y. 23741166 • Unjustly Accused, Fugitive... THE LEGEND OF BILLIE JEAN .0.13 DAILY: 2:00, 4:00, 6:00,8:00. 10:00 All Seats $2.00 Before 6:00 p.m. Tom Hanks Is: THE MAN WITH ONE RED SHOE PG DAILY: 1:45, 3:45. 5:45, 7:45, 9:45 All Seats $2.00 Before 6:00 p.m. Joe Dante's EXPLORERS PG NIGHTLY: 7:15, 9:15 "There has been a real major change in the way Social Security does business, and we're still in the process of vastly improving our record-keeping process," said Mc- Steen. The downtown office is in an imposing brick warehouse where Social Security's records were stored from 1936 to 1960. Today, it is outfited with modular furniture and ergonometric chairs and 43 terminals. The staff numbers 45. The manager, Velma Seabrooks, a veteran of 28 years service, said, "I wanted this to happen long be fore now. They told me this kind of system was coming 20 years ago." McSteen said, "We were sur prised that the people who came in to file claims really felt more com fortable with the terminal ... than perhaps we did as employees using it for the first time." So far, there has been no sign of "fear or resentment or distrust from the public" about the fact that "the most confidential information about (them) is going into a com puter somewhere," she said. "They seem to be very accustomed to that sort of thing." Wanda Jones, a claims represen tative, said the staff was panicked at first about switching to the ter minals, but that soon subsided. Now she sings the system's praises, saying, "It really makes (work) a lot easier. No more trips to the computer room." It also will eventually eliminate the jobs of data review technicians, who used to take written applica tions, encode them on computer forms and send them to Social FOOD WAREHOUSE IG SAVINGS Otil fIIERI lIEM EVERY DA OUR MBULOUS WEEKLY "BONUS BUYS'II • Shouldn't you be getting the biggest savings possible -every week? THESE GREAT "BONUS BUY" PRICES ARE ON Sift.:.TUj3I_VLY 23 THRU SATURDAY, JULY 27. Longacre Chicken BUY A i d . CAN OR BUY j A CASE... sorry no sales to dealer s. NOW GROCERY BAGS ARE FREE AT THE U-SAVE. THIS WEEK EVERY WEEK, GET MORE FOR YOUR FOOD DOLLARS AT U-SAVE!!! Security's master computers. The Reagan administration wants to eliminate 17,000 of the 75,- 000 jobs at Social Security through attrition by 1990, claiming modern ization means fewer workers. Although Social Security prides itself on an accuracy rate exceed ing 99 percent for paying retire ment benefits, McSteen said there was a chance for error each time a clerk had to retranscribe a per son's earnings or other data. Under the old system, 25 days were needed for a local office to retrieve a person's entire earnings record from Social Security's main computers. "Now, we're getting earnings records in 10 or 11 days," said Jones. Shirley Lawrence, a data review technician, said, "The earnings reports are requested right away now instead of giving them to the different clerks. Sometimes we did it that day and sometimes we did it the next day. Now, they're request ed even while the applicant is sit ting there." The agency plans to find other work for the technicians. The color terminals flash in red whenever a claims representative makes an error, such as entering a Social Security number wrong the second time. - The program takes each appli cant through a series of questions about their birthdates, marriages, military service, whether they worked for the government even whether they were Japanese American internees during World War 11. (Internees get military service credits on their Social Se curity record.) SAVE Bonus Buy! SAVE 80'. Bonus Buy' SV SHOP TU IAYTe ; AT - . RDAY 8;1I k i •"i • SHOP SUNDAY 12 NOON TO 5:00 PM (CLOSED MONDAYS) We gladly accept Gov't. food stomps & mfr's. coupons. EVERYTHING WE SELL IS COMPLETELY GUARANTEED OR YOUR MONEY RACK! Lebanese face effects of war By RIMA SALAMEH Associated Press Writer BEIRUT, Lebanon Conflict day in and day out not only takes its toll of dead one in 40 of Lebanon's 4 million people in a decade it also takes a heavy toll in the mental and physical well-being of those who sur vive. Drug addiction, drunkenness, di vorce and depression have reached record levels, experts say, as side symptoms of the tensions and trau mas born out of the conflict that explodes in streets, neighborhoods and countryside villages. Widespread drunkenness and alco holism and an upsurge in divorce are accepted by sociologists and mar riage counsellors as unfortunate but predictable results of prolonged stress. On the basis of interviews with patients and studies in this capital, Dr. Adnan Sabbagh, a psychologist at the American University of Beirut, offers grim statistical pointers to the extent of other social ills: • Thirty-five percent of newly de livered babies are born physically deformed or mentally retarded be cause their mothers "couldn't take it anymore" and turned to tranquilizers such as valium during pregnancy. • About four-fifths of teen-agers smoke cigarettes as opposed to 2 percent before the outbreak of civil war in April 1975. • Forty-five percent of adoles cents regularly use heroin or other hard drugs, a fivefold increase in 10 years. A professor of nutrition and pathol ogy at the American University, who spoke only on condition of anonymity because of the sensitivity of his prac tice, .told The Associated Press, Located on Benner Pike Behind the Nittany Mall. EXifautU f g e Eggs 413` With a purchase and a U-SAVE check-cashing card and proper ID we will cash payroll checks, gov't. checks and personal checks! "Many teen-agers, mostly (militia) fighters, came to me for treatment. These were really drug addicts. They were badly involved with strong stuff heroin. Most of them were unedu cated. I couldn't go into details (about their problems) with them." But he noted that fewer cases reached him in the last year because some religious leaders, who frown on drink and drugs, have sought to transform Lebanon, whose popula tion is 60 percent Moslem, into a fundamentalist Islamic state. Militiamen needing rehabilition, he said, now fear that doctors will report them to their leaders. "If these peo ple had come to us, they could have been.treated," he said. War psychosis cases include rich and poor, country peasants and urban professional people, Christians and Moslems, the experts say. Mirvat Awada is typical of some Lebanese who suffered from war-in duced unemployment, which is be lieved to have hit about half of the work force. "My husband couldn't afford to rent a house," she said. "He couldn't find a job, so we slept at my family's home for a while, then at his parents' house until there was a time when he couldn't take it any more. He began drinking and became alcoholic. Thank God we don't have children." She divorced him. "I feel very sorry for both of us, but this is how the war has affected us all. ... And I'm not the only one." For some young lovers marriage prospects are dashed. "I had a job and planned to get married," said Wassim, 40, an engi neer who lives in the southern port city of Tyre and, like others inter viewed, asked not to be identified by his full name. "But my fiancee left WE HAVE JUST ADDED OVER 1200 TEEL NEW SIZES AND SELECTIONS FOR YOUR SHOPPING CONVENIENCE! The Daily Collegian Monday, July 22, 1985-5 the country in 1981. She couldn't take it any more. One day she and her family left for good to Egypt. That was the end of my plan to raise a family, to have a family of my my own. I've never dated anyone else since." Wassim, who now lives with his mother and younger brother, added, "This war has touched everyone one way or another. Young children are the innocent casualties of war. Three-year-old Saadeh still suffers from intestinal and breathing prob lems after her parents spent several weeks in a Tyre bomb shelter after Israel invaded Lebanon in 1982. "It was terrible," her mother, Mar iam, recalled. "We lived in the dark, breathing the smoke from nearby smouldering buildings and exploding shells." Some . Lebanese have unwittingly cashed in on war psychosis. Bonus Buy! SAVE 20C Bonus Buy! SAVE 40( DOZEN EACH WE RESERVE THE RIGHT TO LIMIT QUANTITIES!