2—The Daily Collegian Thursday, Jan. 30, 1986 business WWZU rocks to a new beat By JUDY FISHER Collegian Business Writer Listeners of rock music and adver tisers alike have a new choice in State College now that a Lock Haven radio station has switched its format from country and western to a hybrid of popular hits and album rock. WWZU ZOO-92 FM changed its format Jan. 1, General Manager John Lipez said. The 3,000-watt station in Lock Ha-, yen is now targetting its program-' ming to listeners from State College,' and Williamsport, Lipez said. Penn State, Lock Haven University and Lycomingliege are three schools ZOO-92 wants to have in its listening audience. "The country station was aimed at an older crowd," Lipez said. ZOO-92 is targeting the 18- to 34-year-old age group. Program Director Mark Williams said the change was controversial for the station's board of directors, but, ''we believe there is a need for such a radio station." "We did some market research and found that people were tired of repeti tious music," Lipez said, referring to popular hits and album rock. The research showed that people were also tired of repititious commer cials, he said. So, ZOO-92 has a limit ,e-- , E Ku ft; 17 0 I = al = Mil • rift i rr-ri II 1111~ r=eflo' • • r r .--Err , .. r , .„':viiidorr) Eve, Mii - A Midri 4:d ti Ce[l..L4E: of 12 minutes of commercials per hour, which he said it has not yet come clOse to and will not go over. ZOO-92 receives ratings from Arbi tron, a company which surveys only twice a year, during the spring and fall, and also does not survey college students. Program Director Mark Williams said the country station's ratings were good, but now they ex pect to be better. `We did some market research and found that people were tired of repetitious music.' —John Lipez, WWZU general manager They are judging the public's reac tion now by logging the number of telephone calls and letters they re ceive, Williams said. "I've never seen phone calls like we're getting now," he said. "I know there's a lot of talk about us." Part of the incredible response included calls from advertisers want ing to do business with them, Lipez said. ), ti r - L. ) (:-- ( L rf fi cr . :-- k ,, , ciplj E r , :-- D ...„, , .. L. , ` , ...c.. r ,I 17 1 , ''::!:::. 7 , 14: l a r k! . : ; 1 1 :, I t il ; : i ',t ,:.1.: ' 4 ' • , `. , f :' '....5.'..... `.. ' ,„.... ''] 1-7.. N '4,6 1 1 % 'a ' ,rte ~,,, 4,--, , -.,•.;...-.. ~,, 1:4:. .ni ~.. 1 , , .. iri4 Dollar Day Specials . 1. . r .„.., 01, " \,,.1. ~......vie „ v0z:.:6..) w ( ir,,.g--- 0 0 0 ) 8 (r, ALL Winter Sportswear, dresses and coats. t: x:: 116 W. College Ave. 1 ? i 1 r . , 11 Ar, *I r.77731,17,P.:77.7,7.77777:4-74.117-77Tr • • -•„.• f‘ • wAd' Duke Gastiger, owner of The All-, American Rathskeller, 108 S. Pugh! St., said some of his employees were listening to the new station and tipped his interest in advertising to the new ZOO-92. Gastiger said the mix of rock music, is what listeners like about the sta tion, adding•that he thinks. the music will appeal to the 21 and older crowd. "I think it will become a popular radio station," Gastiger said. He said he has spoken to people at ZOO-92 and they are more flexible with advertising than other stations have been. Bill Landis, program director for, WXLR, 421 E. Beaver Ave., said he has not yet felt any competition in advertising from ZOO-92, and does not think X-103 will be affected much. "They're going after a different target audience," Landis said. "We appeal to a wider age range 18-49." The general manager of WQWK, Clearview Ave, was not available for Comment. Although some State College resi-. dents may have trouble receiving ZOO-92's signal, the FCC regulations do not allow the radio station to increase their wattage. But, Williams said the station will make the sound cleaner and punchier. 51[ IP ~~~ 777 , ~,, 4,„ "'v,, .4.; ~..„ „„ L. ,,, zvr , 1 .„ . . t . t ,.., , , , ,, 5 , 41 ,.. ,:4 ~ ~, A0 77-7177.7747 . 41 , .4i. !. :7 ....„: ..,.,--_,-,,,,e) ( ,-...,...„...,,,,,;,,,,,.,./4.:40,‘..,,,,,.,.,,:),4!ri....4,4.5k2,,,...,,..0,L , ? . 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I• A ';,...' t ' , l 4V 4 5i11:'.A....,..L.1 , .......6.1. . Id ; 70 7 7777 r?' r - LPL 0 ri744.h213 r=.l I C: 10,„-. ' irrj :1;=-3 'i . ' . ' USE'''(ASSS Dlrese As ) (" 4. f ' ~.,-, Al . qi .;?' pc.' :-.:: -N) ...,.. k + 40 ~„.,,.. =l"' -.' :>7 '1 r%" I • fi',. -41, \• 4r."'' ' ' , ~..3—,j: ' " 1: i'-`,4 qi 1 • '' ;irs -',5",,, 74,4 L.,. 11 crr ) al\ .r7= Thurs. 9:30-8:30 Fri. 9:30-5:30 Sat. 9:30-5:30 Sun. 12-4 Schnapps profits flourish as new flavors enter market By W.T..HOLLAND Collegian Staff Writer Profits in flavored schnapps were indeed "fruitful" in 1985, sending bartenders in a frenzy to create new concoctions and consumers to the liquor stores in record numbers, said experts from the distilled. spirits industry. Schnapps, the alcohol cordial that traditionally left American palates smacking only peppermint, spearmint and cinnamon, has undergone a flavor explosion in the last three years. Not since Bailey's Irish Cream came into the markets has the distilled spirits industry seen such a sales phe nomenon, said Emil Pavone, spokesman for National Distillers of New. York. • His company holds the claim in this country to Original Peachtree Schnapps. Made by John DeKyper and Sons of Holland, National Distillers placed DeKyper Original Apple Barrel schnapps on the market in October 1983, and sold 5 million bottles during the first year, he said. '"(Peachtree Schnapps) took our heads off," Pavone said in comparison. "You wouldn't believe it. In one year we sold 12 million bottles before any consumer adver tising began." That translates to over 1 million cases of Peachtree produced in the first year and marks the first time in 50 years since the repeal of Prohibition that a million cases of a spirit beverage was sold by a single distiller, Pavone said. He said the sales were remarkable for a product that relied on word-of-mouth for its promotion. The industry is barred from using electronic advertising media, Pavone said. X 36 at e 1,41 I I .111-1/...\tr elr I nlO, „„ t l y vY avd) "I.•' ^,-.;4'"SVIi 'ge Pizza 'cial for y $4.50 RGE PIZZA. h One Topping $5.25 NS AT 11:1 .: ~` ~~;#, ~?'~~' r. t;. - ot ER" • o r ,_ C[Va-Wrid.) .--- ~, -;?!. ~ g , :' , 4, ~ ~,„ ,:,;-r. , ..., 4 r c'e gv,- ; 0 -:., 1:.?, Ivii ,„e1.9 v..)„, , ~, ~ t p.- . ,, ) f . :e7, , ,. t 1. , - - ~© ~ic , ..-, :,,,., ~.] Jupon Although figtfres for 1985 have not been tallied, Peach tree is expected to be the forerunner in the schnapps market for last year. • Louisville-based competitor, Mr. Boston Distillers, entered the market in Fall 1982 by introducing the first break from traditional peppermint, cinnamon, and spear mint flavors. Mr. Boston spokeswoman Donna Anne Hayden said their Apple Schnapps was the first fruit flavor to hit the industry. Since then, Mr. Boston has expanded the market with its best-selling Original Strawberry, Choco-Mint, Root beer. (it froths, just add Club Soda), and the new Nut- Cracker, which goes after' the tastebuds of the "Amaretto-lovers," Hayden said. "These are some figures that are just going to blow you away," Hayden said of industry schnapps sales since 1982. "Sales since that time have increased 500 percent. That's the biggest increase the industry has seen in a long Other distillers have tried to get a piece of the action. According to Market Search, a distilled spirits and wine trade journal, Hiram Walker Distillers introduced Cider Mill apple-flavored and Orchard Orange schnapps last year, and is also expected to make a good market showing this year. They also introduced Hazelnut, Wild Strawber ry, and Apricot, according to the trade journal. Overall schnapps sales statewide edged to 135,000 cases last year, according to reports supplied by the Pennsylva nia Liquor Control Board. Of those sales, 111,455 were of DeKyper Peachtree schnapps. PLCB spokesman Robert Please see SCHNAPPS, Page 3. . _ . .. .. .. . _ ... _ • . .. .. .. . . .. ._ .. .... . .. . ... . .. _ ...., .. .. .... . ~ .. . . ... . . .. . . . . .. .. . .. ._ .. . ... ~ .. . .. ... .. . .. . . . .. . ... . . .. .. .... .. .. ... .. ... ... . .. .. . . . . . . . . . . .... .. . .. . . . .... . . .. ... . ........ . .... ..., .. .. ... .... . ... ... . . .. .. . . .. . .. . ... . ... .. . .. . ... . . ... ... . . ..... .... • • , • • ,'.... .. . •, .• - - • ..• .• • • . . • •,. . •. • . . . . .. .. . .. .. . . . . . .. . .. . . .... . . .. . . . ... .. . , ... . . . . . .. . ...... ~........ , ... . . . ... . .. . .. . . . ... . .. .. ... .. . . .. . . . . . .... . . .. .... ~,..........-•-:::.:',:-..... -'.., '1 , :: ••• . ... ~.....••;: ,-...,-..... ~.. •• .. y . : . ...• .... - : • ...- . •• : ••• .•.:. ... • .' ..... ..' . -.. .•. ~..• : .:•'•:•. •• ..: :, ~. .... :-.:-..........•::::.:-.'...-.-::.: i!vynote....roshioti - is. :rii.s-r:;. - -...• . ...:..<.-....,:. - .._!..;.. -, ..' ...;."...,,.... .......... .....•......,.•.:. ....,..,.......... .... ...•.!. ........,....... ...„_...•.,. „.........•. 5TATEC0LLEGE....',: . ......::,...:;: , D0wNT0wN•::.:.:-....:.:1.;:....:. .•.: ~•-•.••.••.....,... ...- • - .: •. •...., . ......-... •.,•:....•:•.••, ....• : ~..:-. I () }'a, `~~ ~,~:, . ` 237-2466 FREE DELIVERY IMMllidiAßlVlAanlilil I Gramm-Rudman: It's that time of the year again. The time of the year when the members of Congress con verge on Capitol Hill to begin preparing the 1987 fiscal budget that will take effect on Oct. 1. • „ 4 15 • • • .... rtot 741 • • .14,141) What's the big deal this year you may be asking? Well, the big deal is the federal deficit. The federal deficit has sky-rocketed to an astro nomical amount of $144 billion. To illustrate how much the government owes, imagine this hypothetical situation. For a person to earn $144 billion, he or she would have to draw a salary of at least $lOO,OOO a day for almost 3,945 years! Just hOw did the federal deficit climb to be $144 billion? Looking at the past, particularly President Reagan's past, may give the answer. Remember David Stockman, the conserva tive budget director, who said years ago that the federal deficit should be reduced immedi ately. At that time the deficit was around $5O billion, Congress was concerned, but seemed to be preoccupied and did absolutely nothing ignoring Stockman. Makes you wonder why he left? SPRING SPRING Levine Bros. Men's Shop 147 S. Allen St. • All Remaining Fall Weight _ (Begins Thurs. Jan. 30th at 9a.m.) • Suits • Sportcoots OFF • Sweaters • Sport & Dress Shirts forrz • Jackets • Belts Q Ties • Topcoats • Large Selection of Trousers Extra Jeciallg • Rummage Table of Shirts & Trousers values to $42 999 • Selection of Dexter, Puma and Walk-Over Shoes th OFF r Open until 11:30p.m. 147 S. Allen St. ley ine bros. State College MEN'S SHOP at the Penna. State University State College. Pa. . A Il i 1:B . , 6 4 1 rftl tki .i w 00;,. ~,-! .„1,,0 , - ~ , 0 ~25, z„, :,- c. . - ...„ 1, ''''b 11 4 'C •"•• '" . Air .1 741.4 'I•T"'Y e '4 %.:40 4 4;:;-'.."< igi 1 ' ' i *.k. IN BEAUTIFUL BOUQUETS L Icl WEIS AT WOODRINGS PICK ONE UP TODAY ONLY & carry BEAUTIFUL BOUQUETS Reduce the deficit, but at what cost to the nation? Consistent overspending has endangered our economy and now has put the federal govern ment into a desperate situation. As a result the Gramm-Rudman law was passed. The law reflects a sense of desperation and imposes new rules, raising the stakes, and uncertainties in the coming year. Only now the administra tion is realizing the complex rules of the Gramm-Rudman law which envisions a bal anced budget by 1991. It is currently projected that the federal deficit would rise to $220 billion at the conclu sion of this fiscal year. However, one of the new rules, which takes effect March 1— before the next fiscal year will make initial reductions of $11.7 billion. Due to the large amounts of cuts being taken, some Congressmen have proposed ways to increase revenues. Such increases would come from raising income taxes, introducing a na tional sales tax, or compiling a value-added tax the VAT would come from taxing products during their production. All of these are interesting ideas especially to voters. As a result of the Gramm-Rudman law many Republican politicians in Washington may find themselves replaced by Democrats this November. With all of the rules and regulations con tained in the Gramm-Rudman law, one would think that a translator is needed to interpret this complex garbage. Simply translated, the people that are currently suffering are going to • suffer even more. Farmers, students, and the middle-class are going to be the ones caught in the middle of this budget cutting war. For example, some cuts to Air „,. jan t 3 g' cn .1: SNOW BUSTER SALE! An Additional . er o i r - )1117 q _ ( i y.„„ 4/ ( il all „.i,) Sale Merchandise , - lEl\ 0 , .1 New all 0 Spring Merchandise .010 1 Ladies Fashions and Fine Furs be made by the Gramm-Rudman law, com piled from The Wall Street Journal and The Centre Daily Times, include: • The Agricultural Service, which handles most of the farm programs $4.36 million. The Commodity Credit Corp. which finances the programs $824.6 million. • The Department of Education $170.9 million. • The Farmers Home Administration $154.3 million. • Forest Services $71.9 million. • Foreign Assistence Programs, including Food for Peace $65.7 million. • Soil Conservation Service $24.2 million. • Food Safety and Inspection Service L—sl6.3 million. • Medicare subject to a limited cut of 2 percent. Although these are only domestic programs, the defense budget will also be hit with a $5.85 billion reduction. The interesting point to this is that the hardest hit will be the Coast Guard and the Customs Service. President Reagan's stand against terrorism is commendable, but sacrificing coastal de fense to save money could be a costly mistake. Since we're talking about costly mistakes, I believe the entire Gramm-Rudman law is a big mistake. Many people think the nation is cur rently experiencing economic growth but, Gramm-Rudman will eliminate all hopes of further growth. Let's take a look at how the effects of the law will affect economic growth. First, there will be a decrease in personal income. Due to the budget cuts, many govern ' 0 0 0 fI'USM-MirES ASSOCIC,iO , Ugfi --' presenz '.l„,,,Air-, :i.'' :.. 4: 1., 44 11 ''''W,A wk ' l4 al.s)L ' '"O'ali ' v i ; ~,,, r t kr, 40- 1 4, 4 4. ~,. ~. , t 40 1 / 4 ,,, pt ,:i .. ; v,':, ; (,. v: i; ..t., ..„v„ , ~„, ,-- 4 1 4 %ill : P q v t i - i.' •t i tar u •=- 4:C:d "T -d ' 1 7 , zep. 141) 1 C:Jt: ment employees will be laid off. Secondly, there will be a decrease in personal spending nobody will have much money to spend be cause of a necessary increase in taxes. Therefore, as a result of the lack of spending by consumers, businesses will be forced 'to reduce their production, as demand for their products declines Now, that the monetary system is affected, the Federal Reserve System will take on the task of stimulating the economy by increasing the amount of money being circulated, possibly causing an increase in inflation. We will then have what I call the "yo-yo process" -- it has nothing to do with politicians my description of the state of the economy. The end result may add up to what could be a recession, something I'm sure we will all be looking forward to and waiting with great anticipation. Even though Gramm-Rudman spells b-a-d n e-w-s, there is a chance for a rainbow over the horizon. The constitutionality of the deficit-reducing law is currently being challenged by several Congressmen. If the law is ruled unconstitu tional by the U.S. Supreme Court, a fall-back procedure will take effect, decreasing the defi cit. But the fall-back procedure probably will not have such a drastic impact on the economy. So for now, all we can do is wait and see what lies in the future. Paul G. Fero is a junior majoring in finance and a business columnist for The Daily Colle gian. His column appears every other Thurs day. 3 D o r 4 , % e 7 4 Alt 12 1, 0 44 , . E - 7 6 4" Order Valentine's Day Flowers Early for Sweethearts FAR & Sate College loyal Shoppe NEAR 237 2342 127 \V.Beaver Ave. WOMENS SHOES $13.00-$24.00 HANDBAGS 30'% to 50% OFF. MENS AND WOMENS LINED SUPPERS STARTS THURSDAY e k ys SHOE PUB Et() bl ttorf t s -- 121111111E'v -- 140 S. Allen St. State College g;30.5:30 (814) 23841625 9:347.8:00 Tit Fr The Daily Collegian Thursday, Jan. 30, 1986-3 SCNAPPS Continued from Page 2. Ford said the state market last year only offered five flavors. Now over 40 varieties, including butterscotch, lic orice, blackberry and cola flavors, are offered. Ford said the state liquor control board is now beginning shipments of an imported brand of schnapps under the Bols' label, which boasts an abun dance of 23-karat gold flakes in every bottle. "You just drink (the gold flakes) right down," Ford said. "I suppose they consider it as good for you as iron or the other minerals." Spokesmen from both National and Mr. Boston credit a number of Ameri can trends with the schnappps suc cess. Taste has become increasingly important in the American lifestyle, Hayden said. Hayden said schnapps targets a young generation used to consuming large quantities of sweet, carbonated beverages. "This generation, Coke . . . the Pepsi generation, whatever you want to call them, is really interested in flavor." Pavone claimed that National's DeKyper line now holds the flavor edge, due to "a real technological breakthrough in extracting fresh fruit flavors at low temperatures," he said. He added that since National's schnapps contains only 48 proof alco hol content or half the alcohol in comparable amounts of whiskey, vodka, or gin the new products appeal to calorie- and alcohol- con scious Americans. 1 / 2 PRICE