6—The Daily Collegian Tuesday, Nov. 19, 1985 More co-ed housing proposed By GREGG BORTZ Collegian Staff Writer The Association of Residence Hall Students approved a motion to pre sent a proposal to University Housing and Food Services calling for an expansion of alternate wing / floor housing Fall 1986 last night. Lisa Tait, chairwoman of ARHS’s Creative Living Options Committee, presented a written proposal based on surveys given to residents of exist ing alternate wing / floor houses. The committee used the results of the surveys in deciding to recommend: • All remaining independent floors in Beaver Hall be converted to alternate wing housing, with men and women on the same floors. Fifth and sixth floors of Beaver Hall are pres ently alternate wing, with several interest houses moving into the build ing next fall. • All of Tener Hall to become co ed alternate floor housing. Third through eighth floors Tener Hall are now alternate floor housing. • Stone Hall, now a female resi- $0 • 000000000000000000 • SAVE A LIFE AND HELP | • BEAT PITT! • ® at the 0 • GREAT PITT-PENN STATE ® • BLOOD CHAL £ © HUB BALLROOM $ © 11/19 TUESDAY 10-4 $ 0 11/20 WEDNESDAY 10-4 $ © HUB Bloodmobile sponsored by 0 0 A/p/ia Phi Omega and Gamma Sigma Sigma @ 0 ROl2-325 0 00000000000000000 00 0 0 SYMPHONIC lA/IND WpNSEMBLE PRESENTS IN CONCERT: A FESTIVAL OF AMERICAN WIND MUSIC Leonard Bernstein - West Side Story Morton Gould - West Point Symphony Roger Nixon - Chamarita Robert Russell Bennet - Suite of Old American Dances Wednesday, November 20th SCHWAB AUDITORIUM 8:00 PM FREE ADMISSION The Classic is coming! , The Classic is coming! The Classic is coming! THIS BATTLE WEEKENO OUR . T LADY LIOHS AT REC HAU. SEE PROVIDENCE wSSS* FRIDAYI NOV ' 22 BE SmSSI PEHN STATE vs. PROVIDENCE, 0:30 p m MINNESOTA vs. WESTERN MICHIGAN, 6:30 p.m. SATURDAY, NOV. 23 CHAMPIONSHIP GAME, 6 p.m. THIRD PLACE GAME. 8 p m. STUDENTS FREE WBw With I D. & certificate of registration. PUBLIC TICKETS AVAILABLE 8:30 lo 4:30 DAILY AT THE BEAVER STADIUM TICKET OFFICE & AT THE DOOR. LADY LION Basketball ROARING!! ‘lf we tell some residents of these dorms they can’t come back because of (the possibility of co-ed housing), there should be a lot of people who want to move in there.’ —Stan Latta, assistant director of Residential Life dence hall, be converted to alternate wing housing to make more space available for co-ed residence. The surveys showed 92 percent of the women and 90 percent of the men surveyed in Beaver Hall were satis fied with their option, while 100 per cent of the women and 87 percent of the men in Tener Hall were satisfied with alternate floors. Tait said she belives alternate wing / floor housing should be ex panded because of a higher demand for these options is expected next year with the availability of this type of housing to freshmen. “This will be an extremely appeal ing option to freshmen,” she said. PENN STATE “We expect a large demand next year.” In a survey by the committee, 69 percent of 413 students from the six residential areas said they would have requested alternate wing / floor housing had it been available when they were freshmen. Stan Latta, assistant director of Residential Life Programs, said if space is set aside for co-ed housing, these recommendations should be backed by a large waiting list. “If we tell some residents of these dorms they can’t come back because of (the possibility of co-ed housing),” Latta said, “there should be a lot of people who want to move in there.” BUSINESS STUDENT COUNCIL ! JOB sfarth ! Congratulations job NbAKLH AMY FRIDGEN Dick Hess of PSU Career Development \ for becoming the npw Center, will speak on ways to find a job i - • _ , p . _ write a resume and interviewing ’ I Jum Or Panhel President! techniques, on Tues., N0v.19, i Lot a n f / nvP in 73 Willard at 7:oo ) Dors ot love, l The sisters and pledges MAKE IT YOUR BUSINESS TO BE THERE! of Zeta Tau Alpha ' RO4B 325 i ' ————l ■. ; 0154 ******************** | P.S.A.E.Y.C t Penn State Association for the J Education of Young Children J M • Come hear what we learned at the M NAEYC Conference! £ j* • What’s going on in the field? £ WHERE ARE THE JOBS?? * Tuesday, November 19th 5 7:3opm, EHDev 101 * RI4O -ft ************** ****** * bsbsss*^-: v * ' UJe core about you & love shoring what's happening in the 80's! Hair, shin, & noil fashions for men & women. Relaxing theroputic massage for your convenience: i wvSeS! i|| open till 10 PM images 111 ARHS supports Co-op with deemphasis of pom By GREGG BORTZ Collegian Staff Writer Viewing the Penn State Movie Co-op as a service organization, the Association of Residence Hall Stu dents last night decided that the Co-op should work toward reducing its financial dependency on pornogra phy- However, for the time being, ARHS will continue to support the Co-op and the showing of pornographic films, because the money derived from pornographic movies is necessary for the Co-op’s survival. Joe Cronauer, vice president of ARHS, said the PSMC, controlled by ARHS and the Undergraduate Student Government, is a service organization because the money it earns is divided among the six residential area governments and USG for student services. If the goal of the PSMC is to make money, we can still consider it a service organization because the movies are a service and the money goes to the students,” Cronauer said. However, Stan Latta, assistant director of Resi dential Life Programs, said he views the PSMC as a ■Hii ££o W. College live. £370562 Poaa State Marketing Association j| Christmas Party Gatshy's Tues., Dee. 3 0:30 p.m. Food & Drink Entertainment - Ray Anthony - D.J. Richard Benninghoff - Magician Professional Breakdancers Ticket Sales $4.00 Hovembtr 19-21 9a.m.-4p.m. HUD Basement ».:!■*. jlju, ,_. . .. trr ■7>«*r^ > lW M 7^r^ fund-generating organization as opposed to a service organization. “A service organization provides a service whether or not it loses money,” Latta said. “I don’t think the porn movies would run if they were losing money.” ARHS decided 15-1-2 that: • The PSMC will remain a department of ARHS, regardless of a USG decision to remain a part of PSMC or to pull out. ® PSMC is primarily a service organization because movies are shown to the University community at a reduced cost as a service. All profits from the opera tions of the PSMC, if any, are transferred to the area residence hall governments and to USG. The profits are used to provide service to their respective constitu ents. • The showing of pornography allows the PSMC to continue its services to the community. Pornographic films earn the most money. Residence Hall Advisory Board director Bob Taylor said efforts in the past to limit the number of porno graphic films shown have caused the Co-op to lose money. AIDS spreading rapidly, says expert By KATHI DODSON Collegian Science Writer At the current rate of infection, 8,- 590 people will develop AIDS in the next five years in Pennsylvania, said an AIDS expert last night. Lawrence Kingsley, an epidemiolo gist with the University of Pit tburgh’s department of medicine, said if the spread is not controlled the number of Acquired Immune Defi ciency Syndrome cases reported will increase by 13,000 in the next 12 months equalling the total number of cases reported since 1981. Kingsley said 15,000 AIDS cases have been reported in the United States in the last four years and the United States is not unique: 71 coun tries in the world have reported an epidemic proportion of AIDS cases. The leading areas are Germany, France, Great Britian, and central Africa. “There is no evidence at all that there is a halting of AIDS,” Kingsley said. “The best evidence indicates that approximately 10 percent of the men that are infected with HTVLIII will develop AIDS in three to five Speaker decries welfare as demeaning By VICTORIA PETTIES Collegian Staff Writer The welfare system in the United States is both an immoral and demeaning act based on coercion for both parties, the founder of Advocates for Self- Government said last night. Marshall Fritz explained that welfare is not a charitable act because it removes individual choice, a basic principle of self-government. The welfare exchange represents a victim who has money taken from his job earnings and a recipient who accepts charity from a government agency. Ir "——— Bvx^cLrMi^hts iifl years," raising the number of people with AIDS in the United States to 100,000. Kingsley said there are now be tween 500,000 and 1,000,000 people infected with the HTVLIII virus, which is necessary but not sufficient to cause AIDS. There are more cofac tors necessary to develop AIDS but researchers do ndt know what these characteristics are yet. “There’s nothing left that can be done to prevent those cases in those who are already infected,” Kingsley said. “AIDS is clearly a societal health problem regardless of sexual orientation or preference.” Kingsley said 75 percent of AIDS victims are homosexuals or bisexual men, 17 percent are intravenous drug users, 1 percent are hemophiliacs, 1 percent are women who have AIDS, AIDS related complex (ARC), or HTVLIII infected partners, 2 percent are from blood transfusions, and 5 percent show no common factors. Evidence shows 80 percent of all HTVLIII transmission is through sex ual contact, Kingsley said. Blood and blood transfusions are the secondary means of transmission but the new The government’s control over welfare asserts that private charties cannot replace the function of welfare, Fritz said. People who care about welfare recipients should begin their charity by helping those in need. Fritz was an executive director of the California Libertarian Party in 1983-84 and formed Advo cates for Self-Government this year. In the political spectrum, liberals favor civil liberties but do not emphasise individual choice. On the opposite side, conservatives tend to rank individual choice high but score civil liberities low. Yet conservatives feel they know enough to make FREE 16 oz. with the purchase of your favorite 14" or 18" Bubba’s Sub fcnHBBHHHHUMHHHI emerging risk groups are among the heterosexuals. Evidence also shows that AIDS can be transmitted from a mother to her baby either through the uterus or through breast milk, Kingsley said. However, there is no evidence of casual transmission. In a study of 558 health care workers who treated AIDS patient, not one developed an infection of HTVLIII. Common household cleaners and simple chemicals like Lysol, house hold bleach, isopropyl alcohol, ethyl alcohol, and hydrogen peroxide will all inactivate the HTVLIII virus. Women should know their partner’s medical history, Kingsley said. “I know of no cases of woman to woman. . . transmision of HTVLIII.” Kingsley added, but, “There is no evidence that heterosexual women aren’t at risk to AIDS.” Kingsley said there is no greater risk of getting AIDS from anal inter- course between two men than there is of getting AIDS from vaginal inter course between a man and a woman. Prevention of AIDS in the high risk groups depends on their practice of “safe sex” by not exchanging body Open: 11 AM for Lunch S Till B 2 AM at Night ■ FRI.-SAT. Till 3AM | Customer pays applicable sales tax « “ * Not valid with any other coupon on same menu item B Pepsi® important decisions about one’s personal life, Fritz said. Fritz called Marxists, Communists, and dicta tors “busy bodies,” and said they claim they know everything about everyone’s life. Libertarians are in partial agreement with both liberals and conservatives in terms of issues that favor freedom and self regulation, he said. This will be the first generation of American adults that will look forward to having fewer opportunies than their parents, Fritz said. This is an indication that the United States is growing closer to a totalitarian form of government. fluids, using a condom, and not ejacu lating, Kingsley said. He said 80 per cent of AIDS cases are caused from ignoring these prevet 'ion methods. The increased chance of getting AIDS is said to increase with the number of sexual partners a person has, but, Kingsley said, “Monogomy is not going to stop the AIDS epidem ic.” Kingsley said an HTVLIII infection does not mean a person has devel oped AIDS. AIDS is fatal but HTVLIII is not. However, he said, a person infected with HTVLIII can pass it on to.some one else. Carriers may be able to pass on the infection for the rest of their lives. There is no evidence that the infectous period will go away, Kings ley said. ARC is not life threatening, but the victim has symptoms that suggest AIDS. Kingsley said the incubation period for AIDS is now estimated at four to five years but researchers have not been able to follow any cases for more than eight years so it may be longer. 237-7314 Expires 11/21/85 Quality (kwal*e«tee) n. 1. the degree of ex cellence of a thing 2. superiority 3. higher in order; status; etc. 4. above average 5. Kinko’s kinko's Great copies. Great people. 256 E. Beaver Ave. 224 W. College Ave, 238-2679 237-1317 AT THE GRINDER EVERY TUESDAY Fresh, hot pizza and a frosty pitcher of beer. What could be better for friends to share? Your favorite toppings . by request. All at a special Pizza Nite price! Music Nightly country Tavern \lam. to 11 pm. dally • 'III midnight Friday* & Saturdays 825 crlcklewood drive • loltrees • 237-1049 The Daily Collegian Tuesday, Nov. 19, 1985—7 • fCINEMETTE~'; r —-V BARGAIN NIGHT I | MONDAY A TUESDAY ;■ AT AU. THEATRES J *2.oa r CINEMA ' 116 Halitor 237-7657 RAINBOW BRIGHT AND THE STAR STEALERS 0 NIGHTLY: 7:00 BRING ON THE NIGHT mm, NIGHTLY: 9:45 Martin Scorsese's AFTER HOURS R NIGHTLY: 8:00,10:00 - STATE 128 W. Collaga 237.7866 Glenn Close Jeff Bridges JAGGED EDGEr NIGHTLY: 8:00, 10:00 Write a letter to a friend! Gene Hackman Matt Dillon TARGET n NIGHTLY: 7:30, 9:45
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