6—The Daily Collegian Friday, Oct. 10, 1986 Centre County: By MIKE LENTO Collegian Staff Writer Many Penn Staters like to enjoy their spare time at Stone Valley, but not as many are aware of the other recreational facilities Centre County offers. Centre County is full of re wards for dedicated outdoors types who take the time to seek them. Bill Palmer, a wildlife biologist for the Pennsylvania State Game Com mission, calls Centre County a highly versatile region in terms of game. The great variation in habitat, from the Seven Mountains area in the southern part of the county through the ridges and valleys around State College to the beginnings of the Alle gheny Plateau in the county's north ern end, makes for a great diversity in habitat and game animals, Palmer said. Palmer said the county ranks near the top of the list for state deer hunting. Bear, turkey, rabbit, pheas ant, and grouse can also be found here in healthy numbers. Centre County is perfect for the hunter who "wants to try a little of everything," Palmer said. He recommends State Game Lands 176 to hunters. State Game Lands 176 has two sections: a wooded area in the "Barrens" west of State College, where grouse is abundant; and a farmland area near Toftrees where pheasants and rabbits abound. Centre County also offers plenty of fishing, with a large number of streams and lakes in the county being stocked by the state Fish Commis sion. Penns Creek, recently described by Marcus Schneck in State College Magazine as "among the very best trout waters in the United States," is stocked with both brown and rainbow trout. Black Moshannon Lake, near Philipsburg, has largemouth bass, pickerel, and crappies, and Sayers WHRA submits views on Waring By MEGAN McKISSICK Collegian Staff Writer To ensure student input, the West Halls Residence Association last week submitted a list of rec ommendations to the University administration about converting Waring Lounge into classrooms. Jim Dungan, director of the Office of Facilities Information and Management, and Robert L. Allen, director of Audio Visual Services, attended a WHRA meet ing to hear student views on con verting the lounge to classrooms similar to those in the Forum, West Halls President Pete Allen .said. "The University can do whatev er they want since it is their prop erty, but I really think they want student input," he said. Preliminary plans for Waring Hall lounge call for the conversion of half of the lounge into a class room with 151 seats. The second half of thel lounge would remain a study area but would be refur bished, Robert Allen said. Construction will not begin until the summer of 1988, he said. Patrick Devlin, Undergraduate Student Government senator for West Halls, and Pete Allen wrote a list of recommendations, which WHRA submitted to the Facilities Information and Management Of fice last week. The recommendations include Parent's Weekend starts tomorrow By MARIA QUICI Collegian Staff Writer A balloon launch before the football game, an ice cream social at the Nittany Lion Inn and a free jazz concert are some of the events planned for parents this weekend. Karen Rugh, director of public events and campus relations, said her office and other campus groups have scheduled activities for the 5,000 par ents expected to attend Parent's Weekend. But only 2,500 football tickets were set aside for parents, she said. A reception will begin a 9 tomorrow morning in the Intramural Building, where parents will receive informa tion about the University. Thirty-one exhibits will include displays on stu dent aid, University libraries, off campus housing and education abroad programs The Nittany Lion mascot and the Penn State cheerleaders will greet students and their parents at the reception. The Lion Ambassadors and the Office of Public Events and Campus Relations plan to launch about 3,000 blue and white balloons before the game, Rugh said. The scoreboard will also flash messages to parents during the game. Dam, near Howard, has a wide vari ety of fish. About 729 acres of lakes and streams in the county are sup plied with fish by the Commission. Robert Wilberting, fishery techni cian with the Fish Commission, said Colyer Lake near Tusseyville has been temporarily drained to permit several improvements, including habitat improvement, paving of the boat launches and placing lime on the lake bed to increase fertility. The lake should be reopened by next sum mer and possibly as soon as Novem ber, Wilberting said. The lake will be restocked with largemouth bass, bluegill, and black crappies. Wilbert ing said the lake will be stocked with about 1,000 fish and should return to its normal population in three to four years. For those who are not interested in hunting or fishing, the Penn State Outing Club offers a variety of other outdoor activities. The club has seven divisions: canoeing, bicycling, hiking, mountaineering, horseback riding, cross-country skiing, and downhill skiing. Club advisor Bob Rickets said each division runs trips nearly every weekend. Rickets said the county has a num ber of good trails for primitive camp ing (no facilities), including the Mid- State Trail, which is about 86 miles long and crosses the county from the northwest to the southeast. The canoeing division uses almost any local stream it can, Rickets said, and the biking division features both road biking and mountain biking through country trails. Rickets said the club will now ac cept beginners in all divisions, which it did not do previously, and train them in the club's activities. He also said members can rent equipment from the club. "We are trying to broaden club membership to all students," Rickets said. `I really think (the University wants) student input.' Pete Allen • The provision that all dam ages to Waring Hall will be charged to the University's gener al fund. • All construction of the class room section will be completed between Spring and Fall Semes ters 1988: • The lounge will be refur bished to the standards agreed upon by a committee formed with students composing at least half its membership. • Students not living in West Halls will not be permitted to use Waring Dining Hall for breakfast, lunch or dinner from Monday to Friday. • Classes will not be conducted in the Waring classroom during meal serving hours. • WHRA maintains control over use of the lounge and controls use of the classroom after 5:30 p.m., Monday . through Friday and all day Saturday and Sunday. The University agrees with some of the recommendations that were submitted, but a few altera tions are needed, Dungan said. The Penn State Jazz Ensemble will perform a free concert tomorrow night at 8 in Eisenhower Auditorium. Parents can also attend a perfor mance by Regency, a five-man a capella musical group, in Schwab Auditorium at 8 p.m. Sunday's events include bus tours of the agriculture facilities, compli mentary ice cream at the Nittany Lion Inn, and tours of Eisenhower Auditorium, the Museum of Art, the Breazle Nuclear Reactor, the Behav ioral Learning Center, Ritenour Health Center and Pattee. An information center will be set up in the HUB from 10 a.m. to 3 p.m. Sunday for parents with questions about the University. Rugh said Housing and Food Serv ices officials said parents can also purchase meals at a discount price by using a student's meal card in Find lay, Pollock, Redifer, Simmons, War ing or Warnock dining halls. Breakfast will cost $4.15 or 325 points while Sunday brunch or dinner will cost $6.10 or 475 points. The Campus Religious Services, 4- H Club and the Agricultural Society are also helping with the event. A complete listing of additional weekend events will be available tomorrow at the parents reception. a recreational wonderland An avid sportsman braves the elements as he casts his rod and reel into the treasures. Besides fishing, Centre County offers hunting, hiking, canoeing, winds of chance and the waters of fate in search of fish. Spring Creek, pictured bicycling, mountaineering, horseback riding, cross-country skiing, downhill here, is only one of many bodies of water that offer excellent fishing in Centre skiing, and a host of other activities. Those seeking more information can County. Yet, sadly, many people in the area•are ignorant of the region's natural contact the Penn State Outing Club. MAKE COL LEGIAN PRODUCTION'S RESUME SERVICE YOUR FIRST STOP WHEN PREPARING TO ENTER THE JOB MARKET. A RESUME BY COLLEGIAN PRODUC TION CAN BE ONE OF YOUR MOST VALUABLE TOOLS WHEN SEARCHING FOR A JOB. TO CONVINCE A POTEN TIAL EMPLOYER THAT YOU REALLY MEAN BUSINESS, ARM YOURSELF WITH A PROFESSIONAL-LOOKING RESUME THAT SERVES NOTICE TO ALL THAT YOU'RE READY TO GO TO WORK. WITH QUALITY TYPESETTING, AVAILABLE. IN A NUMBER OF AT TRACTIVE TYPEFACES, YOU CAN TAILOR YOUR RESUME TO SUIT YOUR PERSONALITY. YOU ALSO CAN CHOOSE FROM A NUMBER OF FORMATS TO CREATE THE VISUAL IMPACT YOU DESIRE. WHEN YOU'VE HAD A RESUME TYPESET BY COLLEGIAN PRODUCTION, YOU CAN BE SURE THAT YOU'VE GOTTEN THE MOST QUALITY AND VALUE FOR YOUR MONEY. WITH COLLEGIAN PRODUCTION'S STATE-OF-THE ART TYPESETTING EQUIPMENT, EACH CHARACTER IS "PAINTED" WITH LIGHT BY A CATHODE RAY TUBE ONTO PHOTOGRAPHICALLY SENSITIVE PAPER, SO THAT THE EDGES OF EACH CHARACTER ARE AS SMOOTH AS THE IMAGE. YOU'LL WANT TO PROJECT TO YOUR POTENTIAL EMPLOYERS. STOP BY AT 126 CARNEGIE BUILDING BET WEEN 8:30 A.M. AND 4:30 P.M., MONDAY THROUGH FRI DAY. FEEL FREE TO BROWSE THROUGH OUR PORTFOLIOS OF SAMPLE RESUMES AND SEE THE DIFFERENCE THAT QUALITY TYPESETTING C A N MAKE. Stretch your job-search horizons. Collegian Production can get you started. • 126 Carne g ie Buildin g University Park, PA 863-3215 collegian production 8:30 a.m. to 4:30 p.m., Monday throu g h Friday Server liability addressed After the play, Gail Nease, the University student legal counselor, explained legal liability and the Because of the increased national charges that could be brought against and local attention that alcohol the host or hostess for serving alcohol server liability has received, a pro- to minors. gram to help University students A report prepared by Nease called become aware of the consequences of "Student Organizaton Liability: Al serving alcohol to minors was held cohol Related Crimes and Litigation" Wednesday as part of National Colle- stated that if a host serves alcohol to giate Alcohol Awareness Week. a minor to the point of intoxication, The Total Alcohol Awareness Pro- and the minor then inflicts injuries on gram was invited by For Off Campus a third party as a result, the host can University Students to assist in con- be held responsible. ducting the program. "The use of alcohol by students, FOCUS is a program that address- particularly at social functions spon es issues and concerns of off-campus sored by student organizations, ex- University students. poses the hosts and those who drink at In the program, a vignette of an the party to a variety of risks," the apartment party in State College was report said. used to illustrate the dangers of serv- Improper alcohol use may result in ing alcohol to minors. both civil and criminal penalties, the The play opened with people drink- report stated. ing and having a good time. Through- Peg Dierkers (graduate-family out the night the drinking continued. studies) said TAAP is not an absti- The play ended with some of the nence group, but - that if people drink underage guests, who had attended they should do so in a way that is the party, becoming involved in a car healthy so they do not experience accident beciuse of drunken driving. problems. By PATTY ESPER Collegian Staff Writer Two drug charges dropped Because of insufficient evidence, drug delivery and conspiracy charges were dropped Wednesday against a State College state police corporal and his wife. However, Bellefonte residents Jo seph Pochyba, 40, and Martha J. Pochyba, 39, still face charges of alleged possession of four ounces of marijuana, Centre County District Attorney Ray Gricar said. He said they will not be scheduled for trial before Dec. 8. Gricar said there was no evidence, 4444entor-444444444***** 444G . 4+ ST. PAUL'S UNITED METHODIST CHURCH *g 4g• 250 East College Avenue * 93* Sunday Worship 9:15 & 10:45 a.m. -* 9) College Class 10:30 a.m. -* * Sunday, October 12, 1986, Sermon: 4) "Christians and Leadership" Jhb 4 1 3- Laity, Sunday 9) 4) Dr. J. Thomas Eakin, Preaching 9) SIN VISION OS low as $27 75 Bellefonte 315 W. High St 355.1354 COMPLETE OPTICAL SERVICES CALL FOR APPOINTMENT We will also fill your written Fix or duplicate your current lenses. State College 125 S. Fraser St 234.1040 such as measuring scales, history of other sales, and deliveries or pack aging equipment, that indicated the intent to deliver. "All we had was a certain quantity and it was not significant," Gricar said. A male undercover officer, using a concealed microtape recorder, alleg edly sold the Pochybas a quarter pound of marijuana for $2BO Sept. 10. After obtaining a search warrant for the couple's home, state police re portedly found the substance pre- O 0 n BIFOCALS A complete pair of prescription eyeglasses • offer expires 10/31186 2T...t Dierkers, who helped coordinate the play, offered students ideas to consider when hosting a party. Dierkers said students should con sider providing alternative bever ages and non-salty, high-protein foods to their guests. She said students should also have someone monitor the alcohol to pre vent excessive drinking, allow only invited guests to attend the party and keep noise and lighting at a moderate level. "There has always been a problem with alcohol abuse on and off campus but now it's becoming more visible,". Nease said. She said laws are being enforced more strictly because of this awareness. TAAP, a program offered by the Office of Health Promotion and Edu cation, is designed to help students understand the effects of alcohol on different levels, Dierkers said. "We would like to work together pro-actively, especially with the greek system to address the issue," she said. sented to Pochyba by the undercover officer. The couple was subsequently arrested. Pochyba,, a member of the state police force for 19 years, had been a corporal for 12 years. On the day of his arrest he was suspended without pay. He will remain suspended until the disposition of charges and the internal adminstrative procedures are all handled, State College state police Sgt. W.R. Olson. 7‘etea 7,6tdoeta eciefteinfuedliv i e MIIIIWW • • -- - - a ll o ft 515 if ! under 12 PIZZA HI WAY Stuffed MADNESS evegg'‘*"s-0375 as low os $43 75 • A Sharing Nature with Children Workshop will be held 9:30•a.m. to 4:30 Sunday afternoon at Shaver's —by Kirsten Lee Swartz Creek Environmental Center. — UYE.. EWA..E: 9 % f the sh es a verlise elsewhere f 1 59. I 514. I are n t leather. Theyare ma eft m urethane lastic) an 1 n t reathe. They crack rather than stretch. an •in m st cases cann 1 e re. aire Fashi nSh e utlet sells nly .uality leather 1 twear. N I leather I k-alikes. ROHM E..: Y u _et what y u ay 1 r At Fashi nSh e 11 1 utlet what y u is real leather • - Genuine Leather police log • A diamond necklace valued at $2,500 and a gold chain were reported missing yesterday by Jean Confer, West Aaron Drive, State College Bu reau of Police Services said. • The concrete base of a mail storage box was cracked and the metal storage box moved to the mid dle of the 400 block of Locust Lane Wednesday night, State College po lice said. —by Gordon Zernich notes • Students for %Vacliol) will meet at 2 Sunday afternoon at 103 E. Beaver Ave. • The Society of Women Engineers and the Institute of Electrical Engi neers will sponsor a hayride at 8:30 tonight. Buses leave from the Me chanical Engineering parking lot. • The HUB Craft Centre will have registration for classes from noon to 5 today in 312 HUB. • The Krishna Yogi Society will sponsor a Bhatki-Yoga/Bhagavad - Gita class at 6 tonight and Sunday at 103 E. Ilamilton Ave. • The Human Development Honor Society will meet at 7 Sunday night in the Living Center. PIZZA NORTH ATHERTON The Daily Collegian Friday, Oct. 10. 198&-7 SKI TUNE-UP SALE • Regular Tune-up $24.95 NOW 51795 INCLUDES Flat file bottoms • Sharpen edges • P•tex base • De•tune tip and tail • Binding lube I 224 E. College Ave. I 01986 Domino's Pizza, Inc 1 Free sixpack of Pepsi! $2 OFF! 2 Free Cans of Pepsi! DINNER FOR 4! Stone Grinding $34.95 NOW 52195 cludes all of regular tune preparations PLUS base texturing. etatim ) t 237-2655 WEEKEND SPECIALS from DOMINO'S PIZZA 1 Free sixpack of Peps with ANY large pizza ONE coupon per pizza customer pays all sales tax Expires 10/12/86 N0rth:237.1414 1104 N. Atherton South: 234.5655 421 E. Beaver Ave. onve , s easy .120 L $2.00 OFF any Larg 3-item pizza ONE coupon per pizza customer pays all sales lax Expires 10/12/86 North:237-1414 1104 N. Atherton South: 234.5655 421 E. Beaver Ave. ou c3 , ,y I ,?ss Ihn S2O Lim,:eo De very Area 2 Free Pepsis with a pizza! ONE coupon per pizza customer pays all sales tax Expires 10/12186 North:237-1414 1104 N. Atherton South: 234.5655 421 E. Beaver Ave. cur d'r.e's cam; less t ,- ni led Dc ser, Area One large one item p and 4 Pepsis For only $7.50! ONE coupon per pizza customer pays all sales tax Expires 10112186 North:237-1414 1104 N. Atherton South: 234.5655 421 E. Beaver Ave. C atr.C , s carry : , . , : - ,s I'val iZO
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