■The Daily Collegian Friday, Nov. 22, 1985 Penn State, Pitt leaders place their bets on weekend football game By W.T. HOLLAND Collegian Stall Writer One day after the Reagans and courtesy of Primanti Brothers in Gorbachevs bid a cordial and opti- Pittsburgh. Primanti’s is a fa mistic adieu, student government mous after-hours deli and gather leaders of football superpowers ing spot for Pitt students. Penn State and the University of But that’s not all. As Rosen- Pittsburgh upped the ante on who blatt’s escort, Kluchko will be will win this weekend’s football forced to wear a sweatshirt which game. At stake are a deli sand- loudly admits “Penn State is wich a cinnamon roll, and two No. 1” the entire evening and on helpings Qf personal pride. through to the following Wednes- Earlier this semester, Under- day. graduate Student Government If Penn state loses, Rosenblatt President Dave Rosenblatt and has agreed to wear something Pitt’s outgoing undergraduate similar to show fellow Penn leader, Luke Kluchko, formed a Staters his support for Pitt, friendly verbal agreement to sac- Rosenblatt also offered to per rifice their personal honor before sonally transport Kluchko from the integrity of their alma maters. Pittsburgh to have a grilled cinna “lt’s just a way to get the whole rol ] 0 f Ye Olde College . , . J . , • j jit Diner, 126 W. College Avenue, s udent body involved, Rosen- Kluch ’ kosaid blatt said. He added that he V 1 ~ ~ ... . , . w, r d t ore r >he..„ g - sr d,„g .J^^oSS'S&'S football rivalry between he wo h * schools and emphasized the lm- j eg ~ portan.ce of student support for Saturday’s game, which is essen- Rosenblatt and Kluchko have tial in Penn State’s drive for a advised each other on many stu national championship. dent issues, Rosenblatt said! nHaannnHHHnHHmnraHHHHBaHHHBnBi FREE 16 oz. Pepsi® Open: 11 AM for Lunch R TiM I 2 AM at Night ■ FRI.-SAT. Till 3AM J Customer pays applicable sales tax !■ Not valid with any other coupon on same menu item H with the purchase of your favorite 14" or 18" Bubba’s.Sub The proposition.’lf Pitt loses, Kluchko has agreed to grant Ros- enblatt one deluxe deli sandwich Tuition bills go out today By ALAN J. CRAVER Collegian Staff Writer Estimated tuition bills for Spring Semester 1986 will be mailed from the Bursar’s Office today to the 34,932 University Park graduate and under graduate students, the associate bur sar said. William D. Miller said students must return the bills by Dec. 13 to avoid late charges. Students that do not return their bills by Jan. 8 will be removed from class rosters. Tuition fees have not been changed from the Fall Semester 1985, he said. Tuition for full-time*undergraduate students from Pennsylvania is $1,380, Miller said. Out-of-state undergrad uate students are charged $2,772. For residence hall students, $1,375 will be added to the tuition bills, he said. Pennsylvania graduate students will be charged $1,471, Miller said, while out-of-state graduates will be charged $2,940. George McMurtry, associate dean for administration, planning and pro grams for the College of Engineering, said an additional $lOO surcharge will be added to the tuition of juniors, seniors and graduate students in the College of Engineering and the Col lege of Earth and Mineral Sciences at University Park, Behrend College and Capitol campus. McMurtry said the surcharge will be used exclusively to purchase in- mmmmmmwammmamwt 237-7314 H Expires 11/24/85 ® structional equipment to be used by students in these majors. Students also paid the surcharge for Fall Semester 1985, but the charge was separate from the tuition bill, McMurtry said. McMurtry said the surcharge was needed because the College of Engi neering has had an increase in enroll ment and previous funding could not provide for quality education. About 3,500 students in the College of Engineering will pay the sur charge, McMurtry said. John Cahir, associate dean for resi dence instruction in the College of Earth and Mineral Sciences, said the college needed the surcharge to fund many new developments in research in different fields within the college. Increasing enrollment and safety factors in the undergraduate labo ratories have also created a need for additional funding, Cahir said. About 1,000 undergraduate and graduate students will have to pay the surcharge, which will raise about $2,000 this year for the college, Cahir said. This number excludes about 350 graduate students with assistantships. McMurtry said the surcharge could continue to be used in the future, but it would have to be approved by the University Board of Trustees annual ly- Cahir said the surcharge may be dropped once the college is able to catch up on the expenses created by the new developments in the field. ZTA • BEB • ZTA • BEB ® To the brothers and pledges of BZB, Thanks for the tailgate It was a blast Here's to our friendship - That's going to last To the brothers of Beta Sig, We think you're clever By picking ZTA Regatta will be better than ever! ZTA ® BEB ® ZTA ® BEB ® ZTA • BEB ® ZTA ® BEB ® ZTA • BEB ® ZTA ® BEB gIBHDBiDDanBBIBDDHDn 808 8888888888888 1 B H B B i B B B B B B B B B B B I B L HHHBIBBHmnmHBHiSSraKgGaiBBIBHraqSBiraBSBBHBBBmBSai Graduated Savings. .j,ii!!!i!!ii!!!!!!!i!ii|lllillilllillil!ll| • ||||ij| || jj !!||| iHjljji|| i||||!|j i J||| A pi S'" I rilpE ■dfl I ill |f ill ' 11l I 111 S, > S| di, ■ i !" I | »i l i"*i i»»*| ■ ll,| i “ ini iiih, £®s' $3O 1 $4O | B OFF OFF OFF 1 ALL 10K GOLD ALL 14K GOLD ALL 18K GOLD 11 : I ..»• jjj| One week only, save on the gold ring of your choice. For complete details, see vour Jostens representative at: 10 AM - 4 PM ‘Penn State tßooK^tore on campus Payment plans available. €>l9Bs.lostens, Inc. AMERICA'S COLLEGE R I N G ,u TODAY IS THE LAST DAY TO SAVE!! ZTA 9 818 9 ZTA • 818 • ZTA • 818 • ZTA • 818 We're psyched! ' ■£ , Stale College Presbyterian Church vvfcit 132 West Beaver Avenue mk' 238 - 2422 Services 8:45 and 11:05 a.m. Wg; . Church School 9:50 a.m. r?' mww College-Age Fellowship Wednesday 7 p.m. ' Harry L. Strong, Pastor Paul E. Gilmore, Associate Pastor Timothy J. Mooney, Seminary Intern Love, The sisters and pledges of Zeta Tau Alpha 0154 The University’s School of Com munications has been chosen by the •Association of Schools of Journa lism and Mass Communications to review applicants for the first jour nalist in space, said R. Dean Mills, acting director of the School of Communications. Under Mill’s supervision, the School of Communications will es tablish a panel of professional and educational journalists. The panel Bill would ban obscenity on cable TV By KRISTINE SORCHILLA Collegian Staff Writer A bill to prohibit the broadcasting legislation could violate program- Cable programmers in Pennsylva of movies or programs containing mer’s First Amendment guarantee of nia have some con t ro l over what is obscenity on cable networks will be freedom of expression. broadcast on these networks to cus on the state Senate floor next week, “It comes down to a question of, tomers in the state and can regulate but a local cable operator said the bill what is considered obscene,” Fisher p ro g ramm j n g without affecting na could violate broadcasters’ First said. “Something that is obscene to tional broadcasts she said. Amendment rights. you may not be obscene to me or t ~ . i • • If the bill is approved, the punish- anyone else.” Bat Flsher said cable ( tel ? v ! sio "*“ ment for cable operators who broad- Kearney said the question is not medium people invi e in o cast obscene or sexually explicit whether programmers are interested h ornes - Tbe cab f subscribers a material would be a maximum of two in changing their programming. If the power to determine what ey years in prison, a fine up to $lO,OOO or the legislation is passed, cable net- vG, C , and W lat l i ey wan both, said Roberta Kearney, a works would have to comply, she their children to see. spokeswoman for the bill’s main said. “I’m concerned about the quality of sponsor, Sen. Michael Fisher, R-Alle- : Courts have ruled that states have programming that we provide,” gheny. the right to regulate what they deem Fisher said. "But one thing that has “Possibly such material will have harmful and obscenity has no First to be understood is that as a cable to be edited out of programs or the Amendment protection, Kearney operator, I don’t tell HBO, Showtime program will have to be shown at a said. The courts have also upheld that or Cinemax what to put on.” 818 « ATA • Bon • in • 818 • ATA ® B©n * in • 818 • ATA ® B©n • in w Beta Sig ©a 1 ATA? Maybe B0II? Or £ll perchance? w @ NOW IF YOU WANT TO GET THEM BACK . .. « FOR ZETA TAU ALPHA YOU WILL PERFORM IN YOUR MOST SUPERI6R FORM 818 • ATA • B©n • in • 818 • ATA ° B©n * in • 818 • ATA • B©n • iff B H ■ ' B B B B B ’ B i S i |;‘ i ' Star reporter: FRATERNITIES: Are You Missing Something? Maube Your Composite Or Your House Picture? Could It Be? Penn State to help pick space journalist will select eight candidates from 20 applicants to send for a review by a national committee, Mill said. The journalist selected as the national finalists will be the first in the profession to report from space. The flight is scheduled for fall 1986. Jennifer McGill of the Associa tion of Schools of Journalism and Mass Communications said Penn State was chosen because of its strong communications school and different time of the day,” she said, minors should be protected against But Jeff Fisher, manager of Centre the kind of material often shown on Video, 273 Benner Pike, said the cable networks, she said. AND IF YOU WEAR YOUR BOXERS TOO, THEN YOU’LL GET WHAT BELONGS TO YOU! ★ COME TO ZTA SUITE MONDAY NIGHT AT BP.M. * competent administrators. The University will represent the Northeast district, which is com prised of 10 states. It will be as sisted by four cooperating schools, which have not been named yet, McGill said. The cooperating schools will screen potential candidates and make interview selections for the University’s panel, Mills said. Although the panel is not yet selected, Mills will attend a confer ence Dec. 7 in St. Louis with the representatives from the four coop erating schools. He said he will then learn more about the panelists se lection. McGill said schools selected for other districts are: the University of North Carolina, the University of lowa at Fullerton, California State University and the University of Kansas. —by Carolyn Sorisio & Attention | MINORITY GRADUATE STUDENTS & A meeting will be held to discuss the formation of a Minority & Graduate Student Coalition to address the concerns of minority ff graduate students at Penn State on: £ Date: Friday, November 22, 1985 Time: 5:00-7:00 p.m. «£s• Place: Paul Robeson Cultural Center 4* Conference Room Jt • ' NOTE: The term minority as used here includes Afro, Asian,, Hispanic and Native American students. ■ Expires 11/19/85 l FREE FRIES Open: 11 AM for Lunch B . , ~ 2AM at Night i with the purchase of your favorite FRI.-SAT. Till 3 AM B 14" or 18" Bubba’s Sub Customer pays applicable sales lax g 'Not valid with any other coupon on same menu item IIiyiIIBIIiBnHBBiHiniHtBEiBiDIHaHIIBIHBHBBHHBBBHBimBHHaBHH 0154 W DB Hi HBBBHHI B n El 88188 Hi BnBBBBa B la SfcMMlWOf^ STORAGE flf 9*fJvW|l J 0: ~ >V/ rf ;^;ST,VffI.VV3PSS'K , ''Waswcswwf fev-'Vr: r*' £«• )6 FINAL DAY OF SALE!! 10 AM - 4 PM LAST DAY TO SAVE! GOING TO NEW YORK CITY, NEWARK AIRPORT, or LEHIGH VALLEY forTHANKSGIVING? Go with Trans-Bridge Lines THANKSGIVING HOLIDAY SCHEDULE Special Buses Running to Lehighton, Allentown, Bethlehem & Easton, PA. as well as Newark Airport & N.Y.C. Tuesday, Nou. 26 Wednesday, Nod. 21 Regular schedules will apply Friday, Nou. 29 Sunday, Dec. ? 2600 CLYDE AVENUE —Bl 4“234“2900 STATE COLLEGE PA 16801 The Daily Collegian Friday, Nov. 22, 198! 237-7314 Store all of your valuables during the holiday break including stereo equipment, bicycles or any other items you don’t want to have stolen. Let us protect your personals while you are unable to.