The Daily Collegian Thursday, Aug. 28, 1986 4, ~v , 1. Rubble Five buildings, including the Flick movie theater, 129 S. Atherton St., are being demolished to make way for The Atherton, an $8.4 million, 150.r00m hotel to be located on the 100 Block of South Atherton. DURING THE FIRST FOUR DAYS of classes (August 27, 28, 29, and Sept. 2), students have TWO OPTIONS for making drop/add adjustments AT THE DEPARTMENT TERMINALS any* course may be added* or dropped between the hours of 8:00 a.m. and 12:00 noon. meet with your adviser, complete a registration/schedule adjustment form, • take the form to your home department for ALL* drop/add adjustments. Starting September 3, any* full semester course may be added* (until Sept. 5) or dropped (until Sept. 16) at any department office during normal business hours AGRICULTURE: AN AC 310 ARTS & ARCHITECTURE: ART HO II 120 121 ARCH 12013 13013 BUSINESS ADMINISTRATION: ACCTG 101 206 B A 297 D B LOG 425 FIN 301 305 306 307 310 405 406 408 410 MIS 431 437 FALL SEMESTER DROP / ADD PROCEDURES BY TELEPHONE any* course may be added* or dropped between the hours of 3:00 p.m. and 10:00 p.m. meet with your adviser complete a registration/schedule adjustment form, call 863-9000 and provide the operator with the six-digit schedule number of ALL* courses to be added or dropped, pick up a revised copy of your schedule at any department office the next day. *NOTES: Any special condition such as time conflict, duplicate course request, etc. must be cleared at the academic department offering the course The following courses are under special registration control and may only be added at the academic department offering the course. BUSINESS ADMINISTRATION: MKT 301 322 330 342 APPROVED COURSE CONTROL FOR FALL SEMESTER 1986 MCMT 301 321 331 401 ,424 OPMGT 415 416 Q B A 101 403 404 432 451 490 R EST 305 COMMUNICATIONS: COMM 320 421 EDUCATION: C I 295 411 CN ED 2978 MTHED . 411 420 RCLED 400 SS ED 430 ENGINEERING: AERSP 309 311 313 HEALTH, PH ED, & RECREATION: P E 001 016 016 K• 019 037 K 058 K 0701 ENGINEERING: 420 423 EE 425 428 438 448 449 453 455 458 471 472 473 E I 322 327 M.E 031 050 051 082 L HEALTH, PH ED, F. RECREATION: P E 0731 085 088 K 103 1231 123 K 1351 1381 I 38K 14 I K 150 156 K 173 • 174 238 K 250 250 A 259 265 2801 280 K 309 K 321 3421 342 K 3571 357 K PH ED 030 031 032 033 HEALTH, PH ED, & RECREATION: PH ED 034 036 037 040 041 042 045 046 048 051 052 120 145 HUMAN DEVELOPMENT: HRE,IM 330 410 LIBERAL ARTS: ECON 496 506 596 600 ENGL 004 212 213 215 219 SCIENCE: CMPSC 412 415 435 MATH 001 Thornburgh appoints trustee The Chairman and chief executive officer of Merrill Lynch and Co. Inc. has been appointed by Gov. Dick Thornburgh to serve a three-year term on the University Board of Trustees. William A. Schreyer, a Penn State alumnus, also serves as chairman of the Campaign for Penn State. University President Bryce Jordan said in a prepared press statement: "We're delighted with Bill Schreyer's appointment. He has enormous enthusiasm, great intelli gence, tremendous energy and an abiding love for this institution. His leadership of The Campaign for Penn State is testament to that." Schreyer graduated from Penn State in 1943 and has worked at Merrill Lynch & Co. since. Schreyer succeed Jay B. Claster of State College, whose term expired. Elected a director of the New York Stock Exchange in May 1985, Schreyer serves on the Budget Task Force of ,the. Business Roundtable, the Board of Trustees of the Committee for Economic Development and on the Board of Governors of the Foreign Policy Association, according to a press release. He is also a member of the Mount Nittany Society, which recognizes private contributors giving the most to the University. Lock Haven to tell it like By ROD SNYDER Associated Press Writer HARRISBURG Requiring law yers to write contracts in plain En glish would be a boon to consumers forced to muddle through gobbledy gook that has confounded laymen since the days of Thomas Jefferson, an English professor told a Senate committee yesterday. James Dayananda, a Lock Haven University professor who is a leading proponent of so-called plain-language legislation, said the measure would help people understand complex fi nancial and legal agreements that are a part of everyday life. The plain-language bill is pending in the Senate Consumer Protection and Professional Licensure Commit tee, which held a public hearing yes terday on its merits. Opponents of the measure argue cins ii CINBIETTE ' • a i fificilimmr• CINEMA Mi=Eos:M;lil Streep & Nicholson HEARTBURN A Nightly: 8:00 & 10:00 John Candy is ARMED AND DANGEROUS P 0.13 Nightly: 8:15 & 10:15 RUTHLESS PEOPLE II Nightly: 7:15 & 9:15 NOTHING IN COMMON PO Nightly: 7:45 & 10:00 TOP GUN PO Nightly: 8:10 & 10:10 —by Carolyn Sodslo that simplifying the wording of con tracts takes away the specificity and legal accuracy contained in more complex language. But consumer protection groups generally support the proposal, say ing it would help the average person who must try to understand the often murky, archaic language used in many insurance policies, deeds, leases and credit accounts. "Plain English is as American as apple pie," said Dayananda. "The Declaration of Independence, the Gettysburg Address, Walden and Huckleberry Finn the supreme achievements of American English are in plain English." "Thomas Jefferson was an early advocate of plain English," Dayanan da said. "He lamented in 1817 that his fellow lawyers were accustomed to 'making every other word a said or aforesaid, ST REOPE PIZZA al! RGE CHEESE for only '5.50 choice of toppings o Open: 4 p.m.-1 a.m rs Neede FLORSHEIM il o 6!) S l\ Since P 376: prof wants lawyers it is . . . in English FEATURES QUALITY COMFORT SHOES FOOTWEAR YOU'VE ALWAYS WORN OR WANTED SPOPPoTalutts Lai GeaFt° a '1 - William A. Schreyer and saying everything over two or three time's, so that nobody but we of the craft can untwist the diction and find out what it means.' " Under the legislation, contracts would have to be "written in a simple, clear, understandable and easily readable way." The proposal would allow a court or state officials to decide whether a policy or contract met the requirement. If it failed, the contract could be voided.. "By investing just a small amount of time and effort in understandable language for our everyday contracts, life could be made a lot simpler not only for the consumer, but for busi ness as well," said Sen. Freeman Hankins, sponsor of the legislation. David Snyder, a spokesman for Nationwide Insurance, said his com pany and many others already have simplified the language in their poli cies. 11 II A 9 AVINGS!! DOUBLE SAVINGS 1. Buy at Low Prices 2. Trade in Your Old Calculator Texas Instruments [3 HEWLETT Hewlett Packard 11C $45.95 Hewlett Packard 15C $80.95 Hewlett Packard 12C $80.95 Hewlett Packard 41CV $143.95 Texas Inst. 1746 $7.95 Texas Inst. TI3O $14.95 Texas Inst. 35 $16.95 Texas Inst. 57 LCD $24.95 Texas Inst. 55.111 $34.95 Texas Inst. 66 $49.95 Similar Low Prices on other models • carry full line of accessories and supplies for calculators. , . Your Home I 5 Years Mon Sat ' 10 6 S ST 307 Wes . eaver.Ave -234 - 5888 ' Thursday 10-9 - 1:' .. '•:1•.:-'1:- . 7:a . 1 . 1.•.'''*:'..I:!1:•i .. 1 YOU CAN AFFORD FAMOUS MAKER FOOTWEAR NOW!! KELLY'S SHOE PUD WELCOMES YOU TO PENN STATE. , 4 001BiumemommEmmurnimmimmimmmimi t , CLIP COUPON to SAVE on YOUR FAVORITE SHOES! I I I $5 off I ON ANY $2O or more shoe purchase i I I I -OFFER GOOD till Sept. 15, 1986 Must redeem coupon for discount. Coupon not good on sale merchandise Il 1k One coupon per purchase 1111=11111111111MIIIIIIIIIIIMMIlimiamlimumsomssamomm moo. Ever want to attend those interesting university lectures and earn credit for it? A course of - non-courses, of course! Register for SPECIAL SEMINARS IN STS and be able to earn one credit while attending non-class events on campus. Organizational meetings at first two class sessions; two synthesizing sessions in 6th and 10th weeks of the semester. STS 497 D 969140 (Monday 8:00-9:55) Prof Walker STS Office 128 Willard 865-8951 450% OFF (ON CERTAIN SELECTED MODELS) OD PIONEER" utereo sys, Cars, Domestic and Foreign, Vans and Pickups, Experienced Work at Reasonable Rates, Installation Quotes are Free. ... 1. ,7 . k -l :Video : : : '*., -- .. ] :',':i . ..:::' , ;.:• . " . ':,..:,',..:.:';', - *,.,c0,5.0tte . T.06 . , ....* . :.:•:.'.,:f: . .,. 2 . Huge Savings on TV and VCRs RCA —JVC TOSHIBA PIONEER YAMAHA CANON G_RADUATE TO A - GREATER TASTING PIZZA why settle for ordinc a Y d phD • t Z e - n --- y -v o e u re con have - the best? OPEN: Sun.-Thur. 4pm-11pm Fri.-Sat. 4pm-3am A personally llome Delivered Stem . Delivery in CALL 234.4743 or FREE Minutes - FRESH INGREDIENTS PREPARED DAILY ON THE PREMISES - [maim gm NM IMO MEI MI MIMI NMI NMI NMI EMI MI MI MO MO EMI MI MN MI 11111 EMI $ ° OFF 1° a n y Pizza ONE COUPON PER PIZZA 710 " 4 PIZZA OPEN: Sun.-Thurs. 4pm-11 pm I 4pm-3am We reserve the right to limit our delivery area. Customer pays all PA Sales Tax. Our drivers leave the store with less than S2O. Coupon Expires September 3, 1986. 1 MN QM MN MINI MIN MI En NM tram MOM lIEI MN ............ ~.' -'''' ANASONIC SONY HITACHI SANYO PIONEER YAMAHA Panasonic RX1924 $34.95 Sony WMIB $52.95 Panasonic RXSA7O $56.95 Pioneer CKW3OO $209.95 Yamaha PC-6 $229.95 Panasonic RXC37 $79.95 TDK SA9O Maxell XLII9O. Sony UCX-90.. Sony UCX-S9O • For quantity of 10 or more. Prices slightly higher for less than 10 The Daily Collegian Thursday, Aug. 28, 1986-9 Your address Your phone 234-4 PIE YAMAHA 0,0 PIONEER' Bang & Olufsen JVC Boston Acoustics A-4011 Speakers...s72.oo ea A-6011 Speakers...s99.oo ea r= --- , 7-7-- • ~o-N NI C....:;:;.......' - '1.,;? ., ) . 6 , e""N NI 71 P` 1--. ". ' - I . M. ,ok .00 °1 % PZ=4- , ..ing 400" 1 4 ' i ) it , •' ; . _ .. = .l i t .. 14 •31r;o 10 ; 7- 71 ' ' -' 0 44 svw0 0 " . ~ :...........=:"*.= 1 +•4 $1.79 ea* .$1.89 ea* .$1.79 ea* .$2.29 ea* SYSTEMS '369 and up DOCKSIDES 1-4 QV • umga u- I • conno Rockport "TOP RATED" c -.-