12—The Daily Collegian Thursday, Aug, 28, 1986 EZZ2 PSU abroad: Program expands to three new countries By LAURA JENNINGS Collegian Staff Writer The University's Education Abroad Program will offer three new programs next semester in Greece, Egypt and West Germany for University students. Opportunities for study in Athens, Cairo, and Flensburg will be offered as early as Spring Se mester 1987, said Karen Winters, a graduate student and adviser in the Office of Education Abroad Pro grams. • Deadline for the Flensburg and Athens Spring 1987 programs is Tuesday, Sept. 30. The Athens program is the first program to be taught overseas by University faculty members, said Tony Lentz, chairman of the liberal arts classical studies 'committee, which will oversee the program. Students will spend a semester living in Athens and traveling for 23 days• to major archeological sites in Greece, Lentz said. Trips include visits to Crete,. Aegina, Olympia, and Corinth. "Students will get to learn about ancient Greece and the modern society," Lentz said, "We'll have A '''... 'ENTION STUDENTS THE P. E.INTINT S. YLVAN I A. S TATS - UNIVERS I rrY Power , LicDri 001-01-0001 86 Students who were photographed last spring or during the summer may pick up their new I.D. card anytime from 8:30 a.m. until 4:30 p.m. on Monday, August 25 through Friday, August 29 in 301 HUB. Residence hall students were issued their new I.D. card when they picked up their room key. Continuing Students who failed to have their pictures taken last spring, or students who are new for Fall Semester, 1986 may be photographed at the Registrar's Office anytime from 8:00 a.m. to 5:00 p.m. starting Wednesday, August 27, 1986. Office of the University Registrar August 1986 classes in the morning and visit sites in the afternoon." Eugene Borza, professor of histo ry and director of the program this semester, will also teach in the Greece program. Students can earn between 15 to 18 credits from courses that include Macedonian history, oral communications, and an intensive Greek language course and tours of Greek histori cal monuments. The program will be rotated among faculty members of the classics, his.tory, philosophy, and speech communications de partments. The German department ini tiated the program at the Peda gogisce University in Flensburg that allows students to earn 15 credits in German and the humani ties, said Joe Ruane, graduate as sistant with the Offide of Education Abroad Programs. • Students earn 12 credits of Ger man through intensive courses to fulfill foreign language require ments for the College of Liberal Arts. A three credit course in con temporary German culture and civilization will also be offered. Flensburg is located in the West German state of Schleswig Holstein on the coast of the Baltic Sea near the Danish border. The program at the American University in Cairo began with Penn State agriculture student, Dana Ernst, who approached the program coordinators with a plan to study desertification the study of the formation of deserts and how they change. Students wanting to apply for the Fall 1987 program should do so by October 15. The program will be offered for an entire academic year or for the Spring Semester. Students will be required to take a three credit course in elementary Arabic and can chose from a vari ety of other courses including ac counting,• archeology and chemistry with emphasis placed on Middle Eastern studies. Standard requirements for all the study abroad programs include being a junior, senior or graduate student during their year abroad and at least a 2.5 grade point aver age. The cost for a semester abroad is comparable to a semester at Penn State not including airfare, Lentz said, Calling All Artists! The Daily Collegian is looking for talented artists who have a particular interest in graphics to provide art work for our advertising department. Artwork is intended for publica tion in advertisements which appear in The Daily Collegian, The Weekly Collegian and Collegian Magazine. Applications re available at 'he Daily Collegian ffice in 126 :arnegie Building n the Mall across rom Willard Building. Applications and examples of your artwork are due in our office Thurs day, Sept. 4. OLLEGIAN 100 YEARS April 1887•Apri11987 P==lL sports Alabama opens season with 16-10 victory EAST RUTHERFORD, N.J. Mike Shula, 37-yard field goal halfway through the third stymied for most of the game by Ohio State's quarter. defense, flipped a three-yard touchdown pass George Cooper, the Buckeyes' fullback, to Albert Bell with 9:33 remaining to give fumbled at the Alabama 9-yard line with five fifth-ranked Alabama a 16-10 victory over the minutes left in the third period and O'Morrow No. 9 Buckeyes in the fourth annual Kickoff was short on a 27-yard field goal attempt 11 Classic last night. seconds into the final quarter.' Ohio State had two chance's to win the game Van Tiffin provided Alabama's final mar after time expired thanks to consecutive pass gin with his third field goal, a 28-yarder with 1:02 remaining. Tiffin also connected from 38 interference penalties against Alabama line- backer Derrick Thomas. But two Alabama yards in the first period and 44 in the second defenders double-teamed Ohio State ace re- quarter to give the Crimson Tide a 6-0 lead. The opening game of the season attracted a gasp 17-yard pass from Jim Karsatos was ceiver Cris Carter in the end zone and a last The of 68,296 to Giants Stadium about 8,- incomplete. 500 short of capacity to see the second meeting ever between two of the winningest The winning 73-yard drive, which took 12 schools in college football history. plays, ate up 5:16 on the clock and put For three periods they witnessed the ex- Alabama ahead 13-10, came after Ohio State pected defensive game, with both offenses blew several opportunities to increase a 10-6 struggling. lead it had built on flanker Jamie Holland's But Shula took the Crimson Tide on two 26-yard touchdown run midway through the long drives in the final quarter that kept the second period and freshman Pat O'Morrow's ball away from Ohio State, Ohio State's . Tony Fenstermaker and Mike Kee, center, catch Alabama's Gene Jenks (22) by the ankles as he advances the ball In the first half of last night's Kickoff Classic at Giants Stadium in East Rutherford, N.J. Despite strong defensive play by the Buckeyes, the Crimson Tide rolled to victory 16.10. •Migarlir Bryant's last class to be EAST RUTHERFORD, N.J. Alabama's fifth-year seniors number an even dozen, and when the 1986 college football season ends, the last class that Bear Bryant recruited will be history. They all redshirted in 1982 so they didn't play in any of Bryant's 323 victories. But they will be included among "Bear's Boys." Four of them -- tackle Hoss Jol: nson, center Wes Neighbors, inside linebacker Joe Godwin and cornerback Freddie Robins on are holdover starters and a a fifth, defe , isive tackle Derrick Slaughter, could be a, key player for Coach Ray Perkins this season. Actually, cornerback Vernon Wilkinson, another member of that class who was in jured in an automobile crash last April, could play in 1987 if the NCAA grants him a special hardship year. Slaughter, a 6-foot, 245-pounder from Bir mingham, became important to the defensive picture when Willie Ryles, a projected start er, died last Saturday of an acute subdural hematoma. Slaughter played linebacker and fullback in high school. As a redshirt freshman in 1983, Perkins' first season, he played tight end, nose guard and fullback for the scout team. He moved to offensive guard in 1984 before finding a home at defensive tackle last year. "They needed depth and I had the versatili ty to move around," explained Slaughter, whose career has been slowed by injuries. Memories of the late Bryant come easily to Slaughter. "I remember Coach Bryant's tower like it was a monument and everybody wanted to go up in it," he said. "I remember my senior year in high school people were saying, 'He must be something,' because I got to go up in the tower with him. "My mom always brings that up to me. She remembers him coming to our house three times. She said he would always be welcome there." The most notable member of Bryant's final class of recruits is Neighbors, who started 34 games in the past three years and is being touted as an All-American candidate. AP Laserphoto "I'll never forget everything Coach Bryant did for the university and what he did for me," Neighbors said. soon history $ : 04 1 ,1 ' Alabama safety Ricky Thomas jumps into the arms of teammate Randy Rockwell after his first quarter interception in last night's Kickoff Classic. The Crimson Tide led by quarterback Mike Shula scored a touchdown with 9:33 remaining in the game to edge No. 9 Ohio State, 16.10. Approximately 68,296 fans traveled to Giants Stadium to watch the two teams meet for only the second time in history in the fourth annual season opener. Phillies edge L.A. 2-1 in the ninth LOS ANGELES (AP) Bruce Ruf fin is enjoying his rookie season. Ruffin, 7-3, registered his fourth consecutive victory yesterday with a combination of ability and good for tune. "Everything is going good now and I'm having fun," the Philadelphia Phillies' 22-year-old left-hander said after defeating the Los Angeles Dodg ers 2-1 with eight innings of five-hit ball. "Today I just as easily could have gotten a no-decision. Some times, you just have to have a little luck." Everything seemed to go the Phil lies' way in the ninth inning, when they snapped a 1-1 deadlock. Dave Anderson's error led to the winning run in the ninth inning, dur ing which Ruffin left for a pinch hitter. Jeff Stone, who reached on the error, then stole second on a 3-0 pitch to Milt Thompson and scored when Von Hayes hit Welch's 0-2 pitch to left field for the game-winner. The throw from left fielder Bill Russell arrived at the same time as Stone, but the ball was sticking half way out of the pocket of i catcher Alex Trevino's glove and it popped loose as he applied the tag. Stone sustained a sprained left ankle on the play, but x rays showed no fractures. Steve Bedrosian pitched the ninth inning to earn his 19th save. , Bob Welch, 6-10, allowed nine hits while walking three and striking out 10. Ruffin retired the first 10 Dodgers, nine on groundballs, before surren dering a one-out single in the fourth to Russell. The Phillies, who stranded two baserunners in each of the first four innings, got their first-inning run on one-out singles by Thompson and Hayes, .a walk to Mike Schmidt and Glenn Wilson's bases-loaded sacrifice fly. It was the eighth time in their nine-game homestand that the Dodg ers were scored upon in the opening inning. PITTSBURGH (AP) Eric Davis hit the first grand slam of his major league career with two outs in the ninth inning to break a 5-5 tie and give Cincinnati 'a 9-5 victory last night over the Pittsburgh Pirates, the Reds' fifth straight win and ninth in 10 games. Don Robinson, 2-3, opened the ninth by allowing a single to Ron Oester and walking pinch hitter Max Vena- it}. 4112,,, p ~. ~~~ •~' ... a 4`s~'. ?.'? _,. Reds 9, Pirates 5 The Daily Collegian Thursday, Aug. 28, 1986 ble. After Cal Daniels sacrificed, Buddy Bell walked to load the bases. Dave Parker struck out and Davis followed by hitting Robinson's first pitch deep into left-field seats for his 22nd home run. Rob Murphy, 2-0, pitched three shutout innings of two-hit relief. Pittsburgh built a 4-0 lead in the first two innings against Tom Brown ing. Johnny Ray had an RBI single and Jim Morrison hit a sacrifice fly in the first. Barry Bonds singled home two runs in the second. Parker hit a three-run homer in the third, his 26th, off Jim Winn. Mike Diaz hit his ninth homer in the third to put Pittsburgh ahead 5-3, but the Reds pulled within a run in the fourth on Barry Larkin's triple and Nick Esasky's single. They tied it in the fifth on Parker's RBI double that scored Browning, who led off with a bunt single. Parker's four RBI gave him eight in two games. Astros 7, Cubs 1 HOUSTON (AP) Nolan Ryan pitched one-hit ball for six innings for his 250th career victory, and Phil Garner had four hits and drove in two runs last night as the Houston Astros beat the Chicago Cubs 7-1. Ryan, 9-8, struggled with his con trol early for the second straight start, yielding one hit and two walks in the first three innings and staying behind the batters. But he struck out four in that stretch and five for the game. Charlie Kerfield got his sixth save with five strikeouts in three innings. Garner drove in the first run with a single in the third, scoring Billy Hatcher, who walked with one out and stole second. Glenn Davis fol lowed with a sacrifice fly, scoring Jim Pankovits, who walked and took third on Garner's single. Kevin Bass singled in Garner, who moved up a base on the Davis fly. Garner, 4-for-5 on the night, drove in a run in the fourth when the Astros scored three times. Pankovits drove in the other two runs with a single. The Astros stole six bases, five in the first four innings, taking advan tage of the rookie battery of catcher Mike Martin, making only his third Major league start, and pitcher Ja mie Moyer, making his 11th. . Moyer, 5-4, entered the game with a scoreless string of 14 2-3 innings. It reached 16 2-3, ending in the third. He Please see Phillies, Page 14 AP Laserphoto