14—The Daily Collegian Tuesday, Aug. 5, 1986 TV program highlights PSU football By ANGELA BRADLEY Collegian Staff Writer A one-hour television program featuring highlights from the last 100 years of Penn State football is scheduled to air on ESPN later this month. The program, Penn State Foot ball: A Century of Excellence, will focus on scenes from three gala banquets which kicked off the Uni versity's Century of Excellence celebration honoring the 100th an niversary of football at the Univer sity. It is scheduled to air at 6 p.m. Aug. 23. "The program combines the highlights of all three evenings into one show," said Robert Mathews, a 1975 Penn State graduate and crea tive director for Total Communica tion Systems, the program's producer. House, Senate debate defense spending for Pentagon's programs By TIM AHERN Associated Press Writer WASHINGTON, D.C. President Rea gan's "Star Wars" anti-missile project and his plans to abandon the SALT II nuclear arms treaties were the key targets yesterday as Congress began debating the Pentagon's budget. Both the Republican-controlled Senate and Democratic-run House were considering about the same amounts for defense spend ing, but the two bills on the floor would SPECIAL RENT slso°° Per Person. Per Month 1-Bedroom Furnished Units - 3 Person Min. Ammenities All Utilities Laundry Facilities Individual Controlled Heat Air Conditioning New Wall to Wall Carpeting Walking Distance to Campus New Dishwasher One Free Parking Space Per Apt. Call ASSOCIATED REALTY 237-0977 600 Two The galas were staged last month at Hershey, Pittsburgh and Philadelphia. Mathews said the show will fea ture the main speakers at the ban quets. In addition to comedian Bob Hope, who headlined each event, and Head Football Coach Joe , Pa terno, who closed each event, many former players presented speeches. Over 100 former players at tended each banquet, with Walker Lee Ashley, Mike Reid, Franco Harris, Jack Ham, Rosey Grier, Charlie Pittman, and John Cappel letti among those players featured in the show, he said. Paterno said the program would give a positive picture of what has been done at the University in the past century, and any positive ex posure is good for the University. "I am delighted that we are allocate the money differently for the thou sands of Pentagon programs. For the fiscal year starting Oct. 1, Reagan had sought $320 billion for defense, compared with the current year's $286 billion. But Congress proposed to authorize Penta gon spending of about $292 billion for fiscal 1987. That was the defense total approved by each of the two chambers as part of the overall federal budget. The House and Senate yesterday each began what is expected to be week-long consideration of the Pentagon budget with important steps to getting a job. THE• PENNSYLVANIA •STATE• UNIVERSITY BY•AUTHORITY•OF•THE•BOARD•OF•TRUSTEES•AND•UPON THE• RECOMMENDATION •OF •THE• FACULTY • AND•OF •THE•SENATE IN• RECOGNITION• OF •THE•COMPLETION •OF • THE• MAJOR • IN IN•TESTIMONY•WHEREOF•THE•UNDERSIGNED•HAVE•SUBSCRIBE D THEIR•NAMES•AND•AFFIXED•THE•SEAL•OF•THE•UNIVERSITY•THIS -16Z - --: , ..._ 4')4 .- - going to have the television show," he said. Paterno said he was not involved with production of the show, but he put a lot of effort into making the dinners a success. He said he wanted the banquets to be "unusual affairs" ones the players would remember. The dinners were staged to show appreciation to the former players, who not only contributed to the history of Penn State football, but received a good education from the University, he added. According to Mathews, the pro gram will be concerned with a century of excellence "on and off . the playing field," noting that the University has one of the highest percentages of players who grad uate. The promotion of scholastics at the University will also be in cluded, he said. HEREBY•CONFERS•UPON RESSIE MAY THE•DEGREE•OF BACHELOR OF ART GRAPHIC DESIGN MONTH •Or• AUGUST • A • D• 1983 general debate. Votes on major amendments were expected later in the week. The bills that emerges from each chamber will go to a House-Senate conference commit tee to reconcile the differences. Sen. Barry Goldwater, R-Ariz., chairman of the Senate Armed Services Committee and a strong support& of Reagan's Pentagon buildup, told his colleagues that "with this budget, we are backwards, not forward, and we are undercutting the bipartisan achieve ment of the past five years." Several amendments were pending in each N.0..41;t-.-c.R:.IJ. =EI C collegian production Not all AIDS blood recipients can be found By MALCOLM RITTER AP Science Writer NEW YORK A national program to contact people who may have re ceived the AIDS virus in blood trans fusions cannot reach all of them, so some transfusion recipients should consult a physician, a blood expert says. "We know that we're not going to reach all the people who we would like to reach," said Dr. S. Gerald Sandler, associate vice president for medical operations of the American Red Cross, one of the organizations involved in the search. The program, which tracks suspect blood from donor to recipient, cannot trace blood from people who stopped donating before March 1985 and by then, individuals at high risk for AIDS had been asked to stop giving blood, he said. That date is when blood banks started screening donations for evi dence of the virus associated with LOST ITEMS, can be found at THE HUB DESK 126 Carnegie Building University Park, PA 863.3215 _ 8:30 a.m. to 4:30 p.m., Monday through Friday acquired immune• deficiency syn drome. Blood that tested positive was nev er transfused, but the new program is tracing earlier, unscreened blood from those same donors. Infected donors who stopped giving blood before screening began "won't show up as part of our study," so their blood can't be traced, Sandler said. Researchers have no way to count those donors, said Dr. Joseph O'Mal ley, Red Cross medical associate. But like other blood experts, O'Malley said the risk of getting the virus through transfusions before_ screen ing began was very slight. Sandler suggested that people who got transfusions in the early 1980 s before screening began and who are worried about AIDS should discuss it with their physicians. A blood test could provide "a very prompt and definitive resolution" to the worry, he said. Dr. Joseph Bove, chairman of the American Association of. Blood Banks chamber on Star Wars, known formally as the Strategic Defense Initiative. The current SDI budget is about $3.1 billion, but the president's original budget. had sought to increase that to about $5.3 billion. The Senate Armed Services Committee ear marked $3.95 billion for project, while the House Armed Services panel voted for $3.8 billion. Several pending amendments would re duce the proposed SDI budgets. One in the House would freeze the program at current spending levels, while the main Senate CAREER OBJECTIVE: Position in cartography. remote sensing or a related field which utilizes mapping and/or geographic skills. EDUCATION: B.A. in Geography. The Pennsylvania State University. Jan. 1984 (Penn States Geography department was ranked No. 2 in the nation in the 1982 Jones•Lindsny Report); was a B minus student. COURSE APPLICATIONS: (Credits) Production Cartography (3) Designed, scribed, photographed, developed and compiled production cartographic projects; received a B grade. AEIDITIONAL COURSES: (Credits) • quantitative (statistical) techniques (3) • geographic data systems (3) • computer science (3) • differential calculus (3) WORK EXPERIENCE: Stock Room Manager/Receiving Clerk Dollar Bargain Store 11/S4-Present Was promoted from temporary worker so full-time stock room manager Supervised up to six people who priced and stocked merchandise Received merit raise after six months ACTIVITIES AND HOBBIES: lau Club, Underdogs (Geography Club), weightlifting RESSIE MAY 33 Princess Drive .Tajas, AZ 17865 (555) 555.1414 Manual Cartography (3) Designed and executed manual (black•and-whitc) cartographic projects (graduated symbol. (sonne. choropleth maps); received 'a B grade. Remote Sensing and Photogrammetry (6) Constructed photo mosaics and stereogram. look aerial photos. Learned applications of aerial photography to map•making. Learned techniques of enhancing and classifying satellite images for land•use/land cover mapping; received a B grade for both courses. Food Service Worker , Pollock Dining Hall 6/81-12/83 Learned haw to work with unionized and nonunionized workers ages 1810 65, in order to accomplish goals Received two merit raises racquetball, reading committee on transfusion-trans mitted diseases, said he agreed with Sandler's recommendation. Transfusions are blamed for 437 of the nation's 23,115 cases of AIDS, and federal figures show transfusion-re lated cases have shown up in resi dents of all but 11. states: Alaska, Arkansas, Hawaii, Idaho, Montana, New Hampshire, New Mexico, North Dakota, South Dakota, Vermont and Wyoming. There is no risk of AIDS from donating blood. The blood-tracking program, which could reach 4,000 recipients of blood products such as red cells and plas ma, involves searches of records in blood banks and hospitals. Recipients of produCts from donors who later tested positive are being, contacted through their doctors, who ask them to take the blood test for evidence of the AIDS virus. The virus can lie dormant for years before symptoms of AIDS appear. amendment would reduce it to $3.2 billion. The Senate rider was offered by Sen. Ben nett Johnston, D-La., who said, "this is not the time for a large increase in SDI spend ing." At least 48 senators have publicly support ed Johnston's proposal, which has been de nounced by the Reagan administration. Another major fight is expected over Rea gan's announcement last May that he would no longer be bound by the limits in the SALT II nuclear arms treaty when making deci sions on building U.S. atomic arsenals. • physical geography (6) • human geography (9) • linear (matrix) algebra (3)
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