The daily collegian. (University Park, Pa.) 1940-current, July 22, 1985, Image 7

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    12—The Daily Collegian Monday, July 22, 1985
Alumni makes his own breaks
By D. PILGRIM HEINIKE
Collegian Staff Writer
When Don Roy King did the least
amount of work, he received the
greatest amount of recognition.
King, the producer, director, writ
er, and composer of ABC's top-rated
TV show, Good Morning America and
a 1969 speech communications grad
uate from Penn State, made this
remark Friday while speaking to the
Alumni Vacation College.
In 1976 on the Mike Douglas Show, a
French pianist was scheduled to per
form. According to King, the pianist's
dream was to perform with Ray
Charles. So helping make a dream
come true with very little effort, King
put two pianos side by side and let the
two play.
Wanting to keep it simple, he said,
he asked for a few over the shoulder
shots but nothing more. "It was so
easy for me," he said. "It was that
show that I won the Emmy (award)
for."
Men train for nuclear threat
By ROBERT MACY
Associated Press Writer
LAS VEGAS, Nev. The head of an organization
sometimes called the nation's nuclear fire department
says he believes the once-unthinkable an American city
held hostage by a nuclear threat could happen.
A valid nuclear threat could come from an individual, a
group or a country, according to Thomas Clark, a federal
official whose office manages the Las Vegas-based Nucle
ar Emergency Search Team.
"(Terrorist) groups like some of those in the Mideast
appear to have some state sponsorship," he said in an
interview last week. "They're tougher to deal with
because they have more resources to bring into the act."
NEST is made up of several hundred scientists and
engineers who design, build and test America's nuclear
weapons. They regularly conduct disaster drills on tech
niques and equipment.
NEST was formed in 1974 when federal officials, re
sponding to a nuclear threat against the city of Boston,
botched the effort. Luggage and badly needed equipment
ended up in one city, personnel in another.
Fortunately the Boston scare was a hoax. But the
bungling prompted President Ford to order the Atomic
Energy Commission, the Department of Energy's prede
cessor, to devise a plan that could cope with future
emergencies.
The team's mission is to evaluate any nuclear threat,
search for a device, disarm it, and if all else fails
assist in clean-up operations.
NEST has responded to more than 70 threats in a
decade. In only one incident did the person involved have
the ability to carry out a threat. That case involved the
theft of uranium from a plant in Wilmington, N.C., by a
plant employee. The material was recovered without
incident.
Federal officials say they're thankful they have not had
to face terrorist threats. But they admit time could be
running out.
"I guess if we didn't think it would happen, we wouldn't
Final examinations may be given only . during the special final
examination period at a time and place assigned by the office of the
University Registrar. For the Summer Session 1985; that special
final examination period will begin at 8:00 a.m. on Thursday, August
8, 1985, and will end at 11:00 p.m. on Friday, August 9, 1985.
Final examinations are 110 minutes in length. No changes . in the
meeting periods of final examinations will be authorized.
No examinations except quizzes and very limited scope tests are to be
given during the last week of Summer Session. All undergraduate
(including 400-level, but excluding labortory) courses are to give a
final examination except were a viable alternate (e.g. term paper,
final project report, studio project, take-home examination) is
used. In the latter case the alternate cannot be required to be
submitted earlier than the first day of the final examination period.
'The final 'examination need not be comprehensive but must be given
during the final examination period. Only "quizzes and narrowly
limited tests" are allowed in the last week of the session. These
quizzes and tests cannot be precisely defined; however, they should
be shorter than a 75-minute period and should count less than 20% of
the .final course grade. A full discussion of the interpretation of
this part of the policy was given in a letter. from the Senate
Officers to all faculty members on December 7, 19Z6.
ACCTG 101 W 003 R
ACCTG 101 W 005 R
ACCTG 104 T 002 F
ACCTG 104 T 004 F
ACCTG 206 T 002 R
ACCTG 400 001 R
ACCTG 400 002 R.
ACCTG 403 001 F
ACCTG 404 T 002 F
ACCTG 406 001 F
PI ST 105 001 R
ARM 011 001 R
Kan 021 001 F
/WM 045 001 F
ART H 112 001 F
ART H 307 001 R
ART H 435 001- F
ASTRO 001 001 R
ASTRO 010 001 F
ASTRO 090 001 F
ASTRO 090 002 F
B A 250 001. R
a LAW 243 001 R
B LOG 301 001 F
B LOG 304 001 F
SI SC 001 001 F
BIOL 041 001 R
BIOL 101 001 F
BIM 101 002 F
BIOL 1.01 003 F
BIOL 43/. 001 R
C E 210 001 F
C . LIT 108 001 F
CHEM 0125 001 R
CHEM 0125 002 R
CHEM 0125 003 R
CHEM 0125 004 .R
CHEM 0125 005 R
CHEM 0125 006 R
CHEM 012 T 010 R
CHEM 013 001 F
CHEM 034 001 F
CMPSC 101 001 R
CMPSC 101 002 F
CMPSC 120 001 R
CMPSC 201 001 R
CMPSC 201 002 F
CMPSC 203 001 F
CMPSC 203 002 F
CMPSC 211 001 F
CMPSC 453 001 R
CMPSC 497 X 001 R
CMPSC 4978 001 F
• E 220 001 R 8:00 106 SACKETT
E E. 220 002 R 12:20 127 SACKETT
E E 251 001 F 2:30 225 E E WEST
E E 271 001 R 4:40 073 WILLARD
E E 305 001 F 2:30 271 WILLARD
E E 352 001 R 12:20 158 WILLARD
• E 361 001 F 10:}0 258 WILLARD
King began his career at WPSX
the University-owned television sta
tion and gradually worked his way
to ABC-TV. He said the way he re
ceived some jobs was by making "the
chance for a wide variety of TV
shows."
Before moving to ABC, King di
rected NBC's America Alive and
CBS's Camera Three. King also won
another Emmy for producing Top of
the Town.
"(In) each case I made the job
more than it was defined," King said.
But, working for a top-notch broad
casting company did not come with
out its share of problems, King said.
He encountered his first journalistic
dilemma when he was covering his
"dream assignment" filming fea
tures about Pittsburgh.
"Things went well the first half,
except for the fact that they were
losing 7-0," King said of the filming of
the McKeesport Little Tigers, an el
ementary school football team.
Some of King's camera crew no
The office of the University Registrar
Announces the Summer Session 1985 Final Examination Schedule
12:20 271 WILLARD
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8:00 119 OSMOND
8:00 119 OSMOND
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8:00 119 OSMOND
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be so aggressive in our training," said Clark, manager of
DOE's Nevada Operations Office which also runs the
nation's nuclear testing program.
"We realize all of this could change with one incident,"
said Lane Bonner, an FBI spokesman in Washington. "So
we have to maintain the vigil; we have to be able to detect
incidents before they occur. That is the object of our
terrorism program. There is certainly increased concern
because of recent incidents."
By federal law any nuclear threat is forwarded to the
FBI. If the threat appears valid, recordings or copies of
the message are sent to NEST's threat assessment group
in Germantown, Md., the Emergency Action and Coordi
nation Team, or EACT. The threat is evaluated to
determine if the person knows what he's talking about.
If EACT decides the threat is real, a NEST team is
deployed from a hangar across from McCarran Interna
tional Airport in Las Vegas. The size and composition of
the team depends on the emergency.
A handful of scientists were called on to help track down
the stolen uranium at Wilmington. In a 1975 incident 40
men searched for a nuclear device in an extortion threat
against Union Oil Co. in Los Angeles. No device was
found.
• In 1978, all of NEST's members were called out when
they searched across Canada for pieces of a fallen Soviet
satellite.
Exotic equipment that would make James Bond en
viotis is packed in huge containers in the Las Vegas
hangar, ready to be shipped anywhere an emergency
dictates.
Elaborate radiation detection equipment is packed in
nondescript attaches and makeup cases so NEST opera
tives can move through buildings and crowds unnoticed,
while disguised vans and technicians roam nearby to pick
up signals of radiation sources.
A situation room near McCarran is papered with maps
and an "incident clock" that tells when a threat began
and how long NEST members have to locate and disarm
any device.
1-.1,,,Lil
365 001 F
367 002 R.
368 001 F
369 001 F
413 001 a
415 001 F
417 001 R
432 001 F
447 001 R
448 001 R
459 001 F
461 001 F
472 001 R
473 001 a
E MCH
E MCH
E MCH
E MCH
E NCH
E NCH
E NCH
E MCH
E NCH
E NCH
E MCH
ECON
ECON
ECON
ECM;
ECON
ECON
ECON
ECON
ENGL
ENGL
ENGL
ENGL
ENGL
ENGL
ENGL
ENGL
108 001 F
301 001 R.
301 002 R.
301. 003 F
305 001 R
305 002 F
305 003 F
306 001. P
-306 002 F
406 001 R
408 001. Ft
506 001 R
508 001 P.
001 001 F
001 002 P
002 001 F
002 002 F
003 001 R
003 002 R
ticed at half-time that the coach's
from the McKeesport side were hit
ting the 12-year-old players in the
head and screaming at them at the
top of their lungs. King said the other
team's coaches were calmly talking
to the boys. The game ended in a 7-7
tie and King brought back the taping
of the entire incident that occured
half-time.
When King decided to air the half
time scene, he said that he wanted to
present the controversial coaching
tactics as fairly he could. King chose
to air the McKeesport half-time first
and the other team's second.
It ended up being the hottest issue
for weeks," King said.
But even after overcoming prob
lems to attain his present position, he
is not closing any doors for the future.
When asked what was in store for him
in the future, King replied that he
would like to act.
"Performers come first," King
said, admitting that he someday
wants to get in front of the camera
The Interpretation of the time designations used in the final
examination schedule is as follows:
10:10 225 E E EAST
12:20 105 MCH ENRG
6:50 071 WILLARD
6:50 225 E E WEST
8:00 101 E E WEST
2:30 105 OSMOND
12:20 203 E E WEST
10:10 203 E E WEST
4:40 204 E E WEST
8:00 203 E E WEST
2:30 101 E E WEST
6:50 101 E E EAST
12:20 225 E E WEST
8:00 202 E E WEST
8:00 206 HAMMOND
12:20105 OSMOND
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10:10 105 OSMOND
6:50' 075 WILLARD
12:20 210 HAMMOND
6:50 136 HAMMOND
12:20 212 HAMMOND
8:00 315 HAMMOND
12:20 319 E H DEV-E
10:10 152 HAMMOND
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12:20 121 SPARKS
6:50 158 WILLARD
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10110 162 WILLARD
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8:00 162 'WILLARD
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10:10 306 BOUCKE
10:10 306 BOUCKE
8:00 273 WILLARD
8:00 273 WILLARD
Immigration and birth rates rise
By RANDOLPH E. SCHMID
Associated Press Writer
WASHINGTON,D.C. Americans had more children
in 1984 than the previous year, but the upsurge in
newborns was only an echo of the Baby Boom of the 1950 s
and early 19605, the Census Bureau reported yesterday.
There were 3,690,000 births and 2,046,000 deaths in 1984,
the bureau said inits first report since 1979 that analyzes
the components of population changd. In 1983 there were
3,618,000 births, down from 3,681,0000 in 1982.
In addition to the gain from births last year, net
immigration was estimated at 523,000, to bring the na
tion's pipulation to 237,839,000 as of Jan. 1, 1985.
There were 1,644,000 more births than deaths last year,
but the net population increase did not result from a
higher fertility rate, Census officials said. Instead, it
resulted the fact that the children of the Baby Boom were
having babies themselves, these officials explained.
In fact, the nation's total fertility rate for 1984 was 1,819
births per 1,000 women, , which is below the level needed to
keep the population constant.
Total fertility is defined by population experts as the
number of children who would be born to 1,000 women
during their lifetimes if the birth rate for a particular
year were to remain unchanged in the future.
PINAL EXAMINATION PERIODS
R-THURSDAY, AUGUST 8, 1985
FIFRIDAY, AUGUST 9, 1985
8:00-6:00 A.M. TO 9:50 A.M.
10110-10:10 A.M. TO 12:00 NOON
12:20-12:20 P.M. TO 2:10 P.M.
2:30-2:30 P.M. TO 4:20 P.M.
4:40-4:40 P.M. TO 6:30 P.M.
6:50-6:50 P.M. TO 8:40 P.M.
9100-9:00 P.M. TO 10:50 P.M.
COURSE
GEOSC 020 001 F
GEOSC 020 002 F
GEOSC 020 003 F
GER 001 003. R
GER 001 002 R
GER 0010 001. F
GER 002 001. R
GER 003 001 F
El DEV 102 001 F
HIST 021 001 F
HIST 452 001 F
HL ED 046 005 R
HL ED 415 001 F
HRLIM 310 001. R.
HRLIM 330 001 R.
HRLIM 330 002 R
HRLIM 410 001 F
HRLIM 442 001 F
302 001 R
405 001 F
408 001 F
4978 001 R
I E
I E
X E
I E
249 001 R
315 001 F
491. 001 R
301 001 Ft
41.3 001. F
060 001 R
023 t 001 R
030 001 R
050 001 F
497/ 1 / 4 001 R
515 001 F
M E
M E
ME
ME
M E
431 002 F
537 001. R
004 001 R.
004 002 P.
005 001. R.
005 002 P.
005 003 P.
005 004 P.
006 001 P.
017 001. F
01.7 002 F
035 001 F
040 001 R
041 001 F
041 002 F
11.0 001 F
110 002 F
110 003 F
110 004 F
140 001. R
140 002 R
140 003 P.
140 004 R.
140 005 R
140 006 R.
140 007 R
141 001 P.
141 002 R.
141 003 R
141 004 R.
MINIMIIMMIEIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIII
I I
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1 with Coupon a
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11Li234-0182 one coupon per customer topping on a slice! 1/
.. NO
10:10 112 WALKER
10:10 112 WALKER
10:10 112 WALKER
10:10 367 WILLARD
10:10 367 WILLARD
6:50 009 SPARKS
12:20 311 BOUCKE
10:10 117 BOUCKE
6:50 322 E H DEV-E
2:30 158 WILLARD
6:50 073 WILLARD
12:20 051 WHITE
2:30 0038 WHITE
4:40 018 H DEV
12:20 108 H DEV
12:20 108 H DEV
6:50 014 H DEV
2130 117 H DEV
8:00 071 WILLARD
6:50 260 WILLARD
10:10 273 WILLARD
12:20 244 HAMMOND
8:00 303 HILLARD
6:50 316 E H DEV-E
12:20 317 E H DEV-E
12:20 303 WILLARD
6:50 309 SACKETT
12:20 162 WILLARD
8:00 309 SACKETT
12:20 204 SACKETT
6:50 105 MCH ENGR
4:40 124 SACKETT
2:30 208 HAMMOND
2:30 365 WILLARD
12:20 367 WILLARD
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Any student with two or more final examination at the same meeting
period MUST File a Conflict Examination Request form in the Office of
the University Registrar, 110 Shields Building, between Monday, July
22, 1985, and Friday, July 26, 1985. Any student with three or more
final examinations on the same day MAY file a Conflict Examination
Request Form. A conflict examination will be scheduled in either
case. After 5:00 p.m. on Friday, July 26, 1985 the'fee for filing a
late conflict examination request is $lO. No late conflict
examination requests will be accepted after the last day of classes,
Wednesday, August 7, 1985.
For purposes of final examinations schedules, a day is defined as the
period between 8:00 a.m. and 11:00 p.m.
The conflict final examination schedule will be published on or about
Monday, August 5, 1985.
TIME ROOM
COURSE
------ -....-
MATH 220 S 002
MATH 220 S 003
MATH 230 001
MATH 230 002
MATH 232 001
MATH 250 001
MATH 250 002
MATH 251 001
MATH 251 002
MATH 311 001
MATH 401 001
MATH 409 001
MATH 409 002
MATH 411 001
MATH 412 001
MATH 441 001
MATH 453 001
MATH 457 001
MATH 505 001
002.
003
001
001
001
002
301
301
321
341
401
471
MGMT
MGMT
MGMT
MGMT
MGMT
MGMT
221 S
221 S
301
301
301.
330 T
002
003
001
002
003
003
MKTG
MKTG
MXTG
MKTG
MKTG
MG
001
001
002
003
004
005
006
007
100 001
251 001
210 001
140 001.
480 001.
493 001.
007 001.
004 001
012 001
432 001
201 001 R
201 002 R
202 L 001 R
203 L 001 R
204 L 001 R
237 001 R
237 002 R
237 003 R
419 001 F
454 001 R
PHYS
PHYS
PHYS
PHYS
PHYS
PHYS
PHI'S
PHYS
PHYS
PHYS
To keep the population constant, experts estimate that
a rate of 2,100 births per 1,000 women is necessary, to
allow each woman to replace herself, her partner, and to
allow for some infant mortality.
Births are currently adding to the population because of
the unusual number of people in the childbearing years.
But as these people age, the smaller "Baby Bust"
generation behind them will produce sharply fewer ba
bies, if the rate remains the same.
Thus, if the total fertility rate remains low over a period
of years, the population will eventually stabilize, and then
could begin to fall as deaths begin to exceed births,
experts say.
The new study looked at three different measures of
fertility, and found current activity well below Baby
Boom levels in each category.
The total fertility rate of 1,819 per 1,000 women edged up
from 1,791 per 1,000 in 1983, but was less than half the rate
of 3,760 recorded in 1957 when the Baby Boom peaked.
The total fertility rate dropped by 27 percent from 1970
to 1984, the bureau reported.
Two other measures, the crude birth rate and general
fertility rate, were also included in the study, with the
caution that those rates can be distorted by the unusual
number of people in the childbearing ages.
FILING FOR CONFLICT
8:00 073 WILLARD
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2:30 064 WILLARD
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6:50 217 WILLARD
12:20 073 WILLARD
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8:00 067 WILLARD
10:10 212 BOUCKE
2:30 307 BOUCKE
10:10 307 BOUCKE
2:30 117 BOUCKE
8:00 248 HIkMMOND
2:30 217 BOUCKE
12:20 002 S FREAR-S
8:00 223 RACKLEY
10:10 203 RACKLEY
8:00 367 WILLARD
12:20 260 WILLARD
2:30 303 WILLARD
12:20 109 BOUCKE
8:00 122 MUSIC
12:20 115 MUSIC
8:00 117 MUSIC
2:30 211 E H DEV-E
4:40 209 S H DEV-S
4:40 209 S H DEV-S
4:40 209 S H DEV-S
4:40 209 S H DEV-S
4:40 209 S H DEV-S
4:40 209 S H DEV-S
4:40 2095 H DEV-S
12:20 207 S H DEN-S
10:10 207 S H DEV-S
4:40 109 CRAM
2:30 002 WHITE
12:20 251 •WILLARD
6:50 052 WHITE
10:10 303 WILLARD
2:30 113 SACKETT
10:10 009 SPARKS
4:40 204 PATRSN
2:30 117 OSMOND
2:30 117 OSMOND
8:00 117 OSMOND
8:00 022 DEIKE
8:00 022 DEIKE
12:20 117 OSMOND
12:20 117 OSMOND
12:20 117 OSMOND
10:10 115 OSMOND
12:20 104 OSMOND
o glowing pal of Slate College TV Svcpty
238-6021 ACORN 232 8.011168
COURSE
2L SC 001 001 F
FL SC 014 001 R
PSY 002 001 R
PSY 002 002 R
PSY 412 001 F
PSY 437 001 R
PSY 450 001 R
PUB A 575 001 R
QB A 101 001 F
QB A 102 001 R
QB A 102 002 R
QB A 103 001. F
QB A 432 001. F
Q B A 465 001 R
QB A 565 001 R
R EST 100 001 R
R EST 301 001. R
RL ST 003 001. F
001 001 R
003 001 F
005 001 F
001 001 F
001 002 F
001 003 F
002 001 R
002 002 R
003 001 R
003 002 R
521 001. F
SPAN
SPAN
SPAN
SPAN
SPAN
SPAN
SPAN
SPAN
305 001 R
450 001 R.
400 001 R
100 001
100 002 F
200 001 R
200 002 R
200 003 F
200 004 F
301 001 F
401 001. R
401. 002 F
409 001. R
409 002 F
451 001
451. 002 F
460 001 F
480 001 F
501 001. R.
502 001 R
503 001 R.
506 001 R.
100 001 F
109 001 -R
10:10 365 WILLARD
12:20 267 WILLARD
8:00. 010 SPARKS
8:00 010 SPARKS
2:30 211 BOUCKE
8:00 069 WILLARD
4:40 067 WILLARD
4:40 365 WILLARD
2:30 262 WILLARD
8:00 271 WILLARD
8:00 371 WILLARD
10:10 109 BOUCKE
2:30 165 WILLARD
12:20 104 CRAM
12:20 104 CRAM
8:00 . 242 HAMMOND
8:00 244 HAMMOND
10:10 269 WILLARD
8:00 301 cARPRTR
10:10 262 WILLARD
2:30 169 WILLARD
12:20 109 'BOUCKE
12:20 117 BOUCKE
12:20 217 BOUCKE .
10:10 306 BOUCKE
10:10 307 BOUCKE
6:50 267 WILLARD
6:50 271 WILLARD
10:10 217 BOUCKE
2:30 365 WILLARD
8:00 365 WILLARD
12120'265 WILLARD
8:00 269 WILLARD
2:30 269 WILLARD
8:00 073 WILLARD
12:20 269 WILLARD
10:10 217 WILLARD
6:50 208 WILLARD
10:10 165 WILLARD
8:00 369 WILLARD
10:10 271 WILLARD
12:20 203 WILLARD
2:30 064 'WILLARD
8:00 169 WILLARD
10:10 367 WILLARD
10:10 317 WILLARD
10:10 101 CRAM
12:20 217 WILLARD
12:20 117 BOUCKE
8:00 109 BOUCKE
12:20 217 BOUCKE
2:30 102 FORUM
12:20 102 FORUM