12—The Daily Collegian Friday, Nov. 22, 1985 WPSU-FM listeners donate $4,800 during fund drive By GREGG BORTZ Collegian Staff Writer WPSU-FM’s annual on-the-air fund-raiser has brought in more sup port and donations than ever before, the program director of the student run radio station said. Pat Donovan said the fund-raiser was “a great success,” drawing about $4,800 in donations from listen ers from Nov. 4 until this past Mon day. “There was a very great outpour ing of support for us, both from the University community and the Centre Region,” he said. He said more people an esti mated 1,000 contributed this year than in the past few years. “A thousand people may not seem like a lot here,” he said, “but people who did contribute gave a lot.” Jeff Daley, assistant station man ager, said he was pleased with the student response. “The student support was really strong,” Daley said. “It’s really grat ifying to see students respond to our station like that.” Daley said every regular show re- The Sisters ond Pledges of Sigma Delta Tau UUarmly Welcome Our Newest Torch Men Rich Pichi €vcin Reed UUelcome to our Pomily! 5 •ft 0154 f I I I NEW SHIPMENT HAS ARRIVED FOUND EXCLUSIVELY AT ceived donations and the response was better this year than in the past. During the fund-raiser, disc jock eys asked for pledges and offered incentives such as record giveaways. People who pledged more than $2O were entered in a drawing for a compact disc player, which will be held in December after all qualifying donations have been collected, Dono van said. Donovan said the fund-raiser is the best way to rate the station’s popular ity. “If there was any question about our listenership, the success of this fund-raiser dispelled it,” he said. Donovan said the money raised goes toward the station’s unrestricted funds, which are used for buying new records, syndicated material and new equipment. He said the money supplements funds provided by Asso ciated Student Activities. “We receive about 70 percent of what we really need from (ASA),” he said, "but without the fund-raiser, the station would basically fall apart.” Daley said the station hopes to collect all donations by the end of this semester. ' adflßLi' ' auHwi vißSk State College gets lesson on schoolbook censorship By KERRY GILDEA Collegian Staff Writer The problem with censoring school books is that books might be kept from all students even though they may only offend a distinct minority, a professor of education at Indiana University said yesterday. Edward B. Jenkinson, also director of the English Curriculum Study Cen ter at Indiana and author or editor of more than 20 books on schoolbook censorship, spoke with teachers, ad ministrators and State College Area School Board members during a workshop on “The Schoolbook Pro test Movement: Developing Policies and Procedures.” The workshop dealt with guidelines aimed at developing policies needed for school systems facing censorship problems. Jenkinson said one problem con tributing to schoolbook protests is that some school systems and teach ers are afraid to deal with controver sial issues. Schools must have policies for re viewing library materials they must be able to explain why materi PENN STATE = ORANGE BOWL SPECIAL CHARTER PACKAGES TO MIAMI 2 day Dec 31-Jan 1 Including: 3 day Dec 31-Jan 2 • ROUND TRIP AIRFARE 4 day Dec 30-Jan 2 • CHOICE OF HOTELS 5 day Dec 29-Jan 2 • TICKETS, TIPS & TRANSFERS I-I~FT7TTinMTI CALL OR WRITE FOR INFORMATION TODAY. § >] Mj § lT‘\ frCjj ■ Limited Number of seats, first 3800 Walnut St., Harrisburg PA 17109 come, first served. (717)652-5225 BOWL TRIPS SINCE 1970 ST. PAUL’S UNITED METHODIST CHURCH 250 East College Avenue Sunday Worship - 8:15, 9:15 & 10:45 a.m. Young Adults Class - 10:30 a.m. Sunday, November 24, Sermon: “The Art of Thanksgiving” The Rev. John Stamm, Senior Pastor als should be used and must have procedures for handling complaints to protect themselves from censorship protests, he said. “Another one of our biggest prob lems in dealing with censorship is that many people attempt to remove books without even having read them and these have been removed on the basis of one complaint,” Jenkin son added. Along with schools, books should be reviewed by educational review boards before being used as text material. Books on the top 10 list for censor ing include The Grapes of Wrath, The Scarlet Letter and Go Ask Alice. When he started studying censorship in the early 19705, Jenkin son said, about 100 censorship cases were reported in newspapers but few reached the court. In 1980,900 cases a year were reported. If schoolbook censorship continues it could have a chilling effect on learning, Jenkinson said. He added that two of the strongest organizations in the censorship movement are the Eagle Forum and the Moral Majority. ELIVERY The Leading Edge Model “D” Personal Computer Full IBM Compatibility.* $l4OO Complete. See the Model “D” soon at= 234-3586° lle9e Free Parking *Special Student & University Pricing A' IA-aJini; lidjc is a IraJcnufk nf I .cad inf lidjic I'roJuuls. Inc. HIM i\u lefisicrai iiailemarko' Inleiiutnnul llusmcss Machines C<>i|kiraln>n. AT THE GRINDER FRIDAY NIGHT Import Specials from 7 p.m. Beck’s St. Pauli Girl Dos Equis O’Keefe Ale Kronenbourg Amstel Light Music Nightly Dancing infill* country Tavern llom.lollpm. dolly • 'III midnight frldoyi& Solurdoy* 825 crtcklowood drlvo • loflroos • 237-1049 sports History serves as a lesson for top-ranked Lions By MARK ASHENFELTER Collegian Sports Writer “Those who cannot remember the past are condemned to repeat it.” —George Santayana, poet and philo sopher And the past could play a large role in the outcome of tomorrow evening’s game when the football team faces Pittsburgh at 7:45 tomorrow night at Pitt Stadium. Foge Fazio’s 5-4-1 Panthers will turn the pages of time back to 1981 for their history lesson. That year an 8-2 Penn State squad visited the 10-0 and top-ranked Panth ers. The Lions quickly fell behind 14-0 and it appeared that Pitt would take its No. 1 position into a Sugar Bowl showdown against Georgia. The Lions, however, scored the next 48 points and left a packed stadium in stunned silence. . Pitt eventually went on to defeat the Bulldogs 24-20 to end with an 11-1 record and a No. 4 ranking. The Lions went on to topple USC 26-10 in the Fiesta Bowl to close the season with a 10-2 mark, which was good enough to earn them the No. 3 spot in the Asso ciated Press poll. The Panthers hope to return the favor tomorrow night for the 10-0 and top-ranked Lions, but Head Coach Joe Paterno thinks his team has history on its side. Paterno needs only to turn the history book back one page to give his club all the incentive it should need tomorrow night. The Lions, fresh off last week’s 36-6 win over Notre Dame, are expected to accept a berth in the Orange Bowl before the game, but Paterno said the distractions will not help his players forget last year’s game. The 31-11 Panther victory finished a devastating two-game collapse that began with a 44-7 loss to Notre Dame. The victory brought Pitt’s record to 3- 7-1 and the Lions slipped to 6-5, their worst record since Paterno’s initial campaign in 1966. After the game, Paterno uncharac teristically lashed out at his team saying “they played like a bunch of Pitt seeks strong finish to frustrating season By CHRIS LINDSLEY Collegian Sports Writer Last season Pitt won only three games, but it saved its best perfor mance for last, a 31-11 pounding of Penn State at Beaver Stadium. And this year the Panthers have won only five games going into tomorrow night’s matchup with the top-ranked Lions at Pitt Stadi um, but for them, this is their bowl game, their chance to show a national ESPN viewing audience what they’re made of. All of which may sound a little too much like last year’s Pitt team for the Lions’ taste. This intrastate rivalry, dating back to 1893, has always held a special significance to the players involved, and records going in have had little bearing on the final result. Even still, Pitt quarterback John Congemi, who has thrown six touchdown passes aginst the Lions over the last two years, said the Papthers are going to have their hands full with the 1985 Penn State squad this time around. “Not even our own people are giving us a chance. So if that tells you anything . . ~” Congemi said. “They deserve to be where they are. They’re No. 1 ranked, and we’re a 5-4-1 team.” But they’re a 5-4-1 team with a potentially explosive offense. On the season, Congemi has com pleted 113 of 223 passes for 1302 yards and six touchdowns, while tailback Charles Gladman has picked up 1004 yards on 177 car ries, an average of 5.7 yards every time he touches the ball. In addition, leading receiver Chuck Scales has hauled in 32 passes for 424 yards and four touchdowns, giving the Panthers a legitimate deep threat. And although the Lion defense has anchored the team all year, Congemi said if the offense hangs on to the ball, Pitt will be a threat to Penn State’s unblemished re cord. “If our offense plays error-free football, we’re going to stay in the game,” Congemi said. “And if not, it’s going to be a struggle.” Defensively, the Panthers also come in with good statistics, as they are giving up just 91.3 yards per game against the run, fourth best in the nation. Despite the statistics, however, Pitt has had problems winning. But middle guard Dennis Atiyeh NEIGH babies.” He also blamed himself, saying he eased up on the team dur ing the final weeks of practice. The setback provided a learning experience for his club and Paterno does not expect the club to forget those lessons tomorrow night. “In ’Bl we were an awfully good said even if the Panthers had not won a game before taking on the Lions, it would still be a hard fought contest. “This game, it doesn’t matter about records,” Atiyeh said. “It’s a great rivalry, and we’re going to get cranked up whether we’ve won a game or whether they’re unde feated. We’ll see what happens on Saturday. “You can talk about last year, or when they beat us when we were going for a national championship, and that’s all just talk. That’s something we don’t want to talk about. We’re just going to go out and see what happens on Satur day.” As was the case last year, the Panthers have the chance to take out some of their season-long frus tration on Penn State, and Pitt Head Coach Foge Fazio said the Lions’ 10-0 record coming in just makes the annual battle that much more meaningful for his squad. “There’s not many teams that have the opportunity to play the No. 1 team in the country,” Fazio said. “Penn State’s the best team in the country, they’re undefeated, and when it’s your rival and it’s the last game of the year, it makes it more interesting.” For Fazio, the Panthers’ season has already been interesting enough. Not only has his squad been hampered by injuries, but two of his tailbacks left the team in mid season. And probably the most frustrating thing about the Panth ers’ play has been their kicking game, or lack of it, as Pat Vian court and Mark Brasco have com bined to make just five of 16 field goal attempts. That’s the same number of three-pointers Penn State’s Massimo Manca converted against Notre Dame alone. And while both teams have al ready finished a 10-game season, they are now preparing for the one game that is somehow different from all others, one that Fazio, who played in two Penn State-Pitt games in 1958 and ’59, said will leave an impression on all partici pants for a long time to come. “A game like this you’re going to remember for the rest of your life,” Fazio said. “You’re going to remember how well you did, and you’re going to remember the outcome. So a game of this magni tude the players better be fired up for, and they better realize that this could mean a lot to them.” football team —We didn’t go down Even if they had not suffered such there with the idea we were going for an embarrassing defeat last season, an upset, we thought we were as good this would still be a special game for as Pitt was,” Paterno said. “The only the Lions. game I can remember is 31-11 last Tomorrow’s game will mark the year. That’s the only one the squad 85th renewal of what some have can remember and that’s the only one called the Pennsylvania Bowl. The we want to think about.” teams first met in'lB93 and since then Home field advantage key for By CAROL D. RATH Collegian Sports Writer As Head Soccer Coach Walter Bahr has said throughout the season, the away team has to approach a game as if it is already one goal behind. When the No. 18 Lions battle the No. 11 Temple Owls at 1 p.m. tomorrow at Jeffrey Field in the second round of the sudden-death elimination, Mid-Atlantic Regional finals, Bahr will be hoping that the same holds true for the opposition. The previous confrontation between the two teams, Nov. 1 in Philadelphia, resulted in a double overtime l-'l deadlock. Penn State was the only team to mar the Owls perfect record of 14-0-1. Penn State (14-5-1) and Temple received first round byes since they were the only teams in the region selected for playoff competition. The Lions’ home advantage may play a crucial role for the team, if Bahr’s thinking holds true. The Lions are 8-4 in NCAA playoff competition, with 7-3 of that at Jeffrey Field as opposed to 3-9 in playoff competition on the road. Judging from practice this week, the confronta tion will be different this time between the two rivals, since the Lions are hungry for the win against the Owls, forward Jay Ruby said. “I think that there are a lot of teams in the tournament who are of equal ability. A few years back there were a few outstanding teams,” Bahr said. “But I think this year that there are 20 teams who could win that. I don’t think there’s a clear-cut favorite.” Bahr feels that in this particular game, the Lions’ home-field advantage may be the key to a Penn State victory, as well as the key to further advancement. If the Lions come away the victors from Satur day’s contest, they will be slotted to challenge the winners of the Great Lakes region final between Indiana and Evansville. “The selection of home fields may have as much as anything to do with who’s going to win, because they’re all assigned by the NCAA based on the crowd,” Bahr said. “That’s why it’s so important that we get a good crowd out there Saturday. If we get a good crowd and win, it’s a possiblity that we can get the next game here and that’s a big factor.” Assistant Coach Marco Bulatovic added Temple may be tough tomorrow, but Penn State will be twice as tough. “It’s been good for us in that fact that we know a little bit about them and they know a little bit about us, which is pretty even,” Bulatovic said. “But the deciding factor for us is that it will be real nice to play on our home field. That’s going to be the difference in the game.” Bulatovic added that the pressure of this do-or die game isn’t new to the team, since Penn State usually is a playoff Contender. “A lot of these guys have been in this same situation two or three times previously and I think they’re ready for the fact of this do-or-die situation and will be ready to handle that,” Bulatovic said. "I think a lot of guys really want it this year beacause we’ve been unfortunate in the past, in the first round of the NCAA playoff.” Bulatovic added that he thinks the year has been positive and the team has a great attitude going into the game. Bahr said that the pressure shouldn’t really £RNCis|9' or> iiiifJgß Forward Thomas Grave, right, kicks the ball past a University of Connecticut player earlier this year in the Lions’ 2-1 upset of UConn. The No. 18 Lions face No. 11 Temple at 1 p.m. tomorrow at Jeffrey Field in the second round of the Mid-Atlantic Regional finals. affect his players since making the playoffs is-the goal they have been working for all season. Defender Bob Christina said that the one thing the team has done off and on all season that they cannot afford to do tomorrow is to let the opposi tion score first. In games against Long Island, Hartwick and Duke, the Lions let the other team score first, which led to their defeat. “We cannot afford to do what we’ve done all season and let the other team score first on us,” Christina said. “In order for us to win, the defense has to establish itself as a hard-hitting unit on the outset, like we did against Connecticut (the Lions upset UConn 2-1).” Christina said the key to team defense lies with the defenders establishing the backbone. He added that if the defenders don’t control the ball in their zone, there isn’t a chance for the forwards to get possession. an intense rivalry has grown. Over the years the game has meant not only the bragging rights but it has also helped the winner gain the in state recruiting edge for the season. Recently, however, both teams have broadened their recruiting hori zions and have been signing people The Daily Collegian Friday, Nov. 22, 1985 from across the country. People sus pected that the rivalry was dying, but Paterno insisted that that was not the case. “I don’t think there’s any question (the rivalry’s) there,” he said. “Even the kids from (New) Jersey and Ohio know each other. There’s a lot of Jersey kids that played against our Jersey kids, a lot of Pennsylvania kids that played against each other and a lot of the Ohio kids played against each other. I think it’s a big game. “I know we’ve got some other inter sectional games now that are getting to be big games on our schedule, but when you come down to it the Pitt game is a big game for us. That is why we were so disappointed with the way we played last year.” This year, however, the Lions have been playing better and Paterno says that their daily practice sessions have led to this continual im provement. Senior tight end Dean DiMidio agrees with his coach’s as sessment. “Practice for us this year has been the same every week,” DiMidio said. “We’re going real hard and he didn’t want to let up at all this year. “He thought that that’s what hap pened to us last year he let up in practice and he got us too soft. Every one is committed to (working hard) they know that’s what we have to do.” Despite Pitt’s record, Paterno is very concerned about the Panthers’ defense. The unit has given up just 91.3 yards rushing per game and is ranked fourth in the nation against the run. Offensively the Panthers are led by quarterback John Congemi (113 of 223 for 1,302 yards) and Charles Glad man, who has rushed for 1,004 yards. Paterno said they will provide a tough test for the Lion defense. “He’s a good competitior, he’s ris en to the occasion against us,” he said of Congemi. “He has a good arm. If you let him in the groove he can be as tough as anybody. Gladman is right up there with any running back we’ve faced this year.” booters Christina said that the Lions aren’t changing their playing style but they are planning on giving it a slight “twist.” Penn State usually sticks to a four forwards, three midfielders, and three defenders type of setup. But for the playoff game, it may switch to a two-four-four alignment. The Lions will be looking for production from their leading scorers, forwards Thomas Greve (10 goals, 7 assists) and Niall Harrison (7 goals, 6 assists), and midfielders Kevin Jennings (8 goals, 2 assists) and Dave Dabora (7 goals, 4 assists). In goal for Penn State will be Bert Eckelmeyer, who has allowed only 18 goals in 16 games. The Owls will be relying on midfielder Peter Dicce (10 goals, 4 assists), forward Franklin Gbinije (8 goals, 7 assists) and midfielder Steffan Hausner (5 goals, 5 assists). Dale Caya, with a goals-against average of 0.63, will defend the cage for the Owls.