12—The Daily Collegian Thursday, Dec. 11,1986 Research Continued from Page 1 cess to such long-term data is rare ... you have to be careful about generalizing because history changes.” Lerner’s husband, Richard Lerner, professor of child and adolescent development and co-director of the New York Longitudinal Study, also directs a longitudinal study of stress and coping during the transitions of early adolescence. In addition to longitudinal studies, research projects in areas such as nutrition and genetics have extended the overall research spectrum of the College of Human Development to include more scientific realms, said Pattishall. ‘‘So much of what we have become is dependent on our genetics, how we behave, and what we eat. We’re doing a lot of research here in major areas of nutritional SQience,” Pattishall said, adding that a large portion of research funding comes from the National Institute of Health and the National Science Foundation. “Re searchers are attempting to deter mine what the nutritional risk factors involved in health and disease are.” “And most of the genetics research in the University is going on in this college,” he said. “We grew out of a college of home economics and we’re now becoming a college of health and human development.” In the College of Arts and Architec ture, playwrights, art historians, Professor: Reagan helps aid education Professor of Education William Boyd spoke on “How to Reform Schools without Half Trying: Secrets of the Reagan Administration” at last night’s Graduate School lecture se ries. “Extraordinary changes and re forms have been made for primary education under the Reagan Adminis tration,” Boyd said. He said Reagan has taken hold of the “bully pulpit,” meaning that Rea gan has used his great communica tion abilities to bring about educational reforms. - Reagan convinced state and local governments that it is their responsi bility to support incentive for im proved teaching in primary education, not the federal govern ment’s responsibility, Boyd said. ’Tis The Season To 1 V Join In The Fun At The Founders’Room Holiday Buffet Wednesday, Dec. 17th-Friday, Dec. 19th 11:30 A.M.-1:30 P.M. Treat The Office And Yourself To an All- You-Care-To-Eat Buffet Steamship Round of Beef Stuffed Chicken Breast Seafood Newburg Cranberry Walnut Salad Deviled Eggs Vegetable Tray with Dip Yule Log Torte Pumpkin Pie Christmas Cookies Beverages Only $ 6.95 per person a la board and Diner's Club plans always welcome Reservations Are Suggested 865 ■ 7623 *due to our Holiday Buffet, Our Regular Menu Will Be .Unavailable Dec. 17th-19th. print-makers, sculptors, scenic de signers and composers are also an important part of University re search. For these people, however, the word “research” often takes on different meanings, said Harlan Hof fa, associate dean of research for the College of Arts 'and Architecture. “Research is a word that has emerged with the sciences, and over a period of years, it has come to have a more generic meaning,” Hoffa said. "When talking about more hu manistic inquiry, research is called scholarship or, in painting and act ing, creative performance. .. you have to be sensitive to the distinc tions.” “We’re in the minority here, and some pay little attention to what we do,” he said. “The amount of money involved is peanuts and the scale of activity is considerably less yet the arts have had and always will have a very significant meaning.” Not only is funding for research within the college low, but so is the desire and ability of artists to write proposals and seek support, Hoffa said. “There is a lack of tradition of seeking funds in the arts. Traditional support has always come from roy alty and religion,” he said. “Because the arts are very private, going out for funds makes it a more public enterprise. People in the col lege have had little experience writ ing proposals, but we need to encourage the faculty,” Hoffa added. Merit pay is the most controversial reform, he said. The nation’s two major teachers’ unions oppose the merit pay reform because it promotes unwanted com petition between teachers, and there is dispute on who is qualified to judge which teachers deserve more pay, Boyd said. Boyd said salary structure is. an accepted part of higher education. There, are minimal controversies be cause there are rank positions which motivate instructors to move up the ladder, he said. Reagan’s main fault with higher education is the minimal amount of financial aid the federal government has provided, said. —by Megan McKissick 4 million saved by UNICEF By NICK LUDINGTON Associated Press Writer UNITED NATIONS - Simple, low-cost medical care has saved the lives of 4 million poor children in the last five years and could save almost twice that many, each year if used more widely, UNICEF said yesterday. More than 14 million children under the age of 5 die every year, but improvements in commu nications and transportation make it possible for even the poorest countries - the capability of reaching half of them with life saving treatment, the U.N. Chil dren’s Fund said in a report. “The time has come for gov ernments and peoples to decide that it is just as unacceptable for so many millions of children to die every year of needless malnu trition and infection as it is for them to die in sudden droughts or famines,” the report said. “It should frankly be a matter of national shame” if a country does not begin campaigns- for immunization against six killer diseases or fails to encourage the use of oral rehydration therapy to combat often fatal dehydration due to diarrhea, the report said. Oral rehydration therapy is the use of a simple solution of water and salts. It costs only pennies. Children can be immunized against measles, tetanus, whoop ing cough, polio, diphtheria and tuberculosis, and many others can be saved through the spread of basic health education on weaning, Vitamin A and respira tory diseases. The UNICEF report, entitled “State of the World’s Children,” said use of such simple tech niques saved 4 million children in the past five years, It said poverty will always be a factor in meeting the health needs of children, “but even with in those limits a new era in child health can now begin.” UNICEF supplied 377 million doses of vaccines to more than 100 developing countries in 1985. sports Once again, cagers come from ahead to lose By MARK BRENNAN Collegian Sports Writer As far as anybody knows, Head Basketball Coach Bruce Parkhill may still be chewing out the men’s basketball team over a (73-70 loss at the hands of Lehigh last night in Rec Hall. i He tongue-lashed the team for at least one hour and 30 minutes after the game last night, at which point a team manager stuck his head out of the lockerroom door and told all of the reporters to go home. Considering the Lions’ play in the game, the move was understandable. After Penn State blew a 13-point second half lead for the teams’ third straight loss, Parkhill probably had nothing worth saying. Forward Carl Chrabascz’s blocked three-point attempt at the buzzer sealed the loss for the Lions (2-3), and typified Penn State’s frustration’s in the last 10 minutes of the game. Lehigh (3-2) did not actually hold a lead in the game until the 1:41 mark of th e second half, when it went up by one point, 68-67, on Mike Polaha’s 16- foot jumper. Chrabascz missed a shot from near the top of the key, and Polaha, who scored 13 of his 20 points in the half, responded at the other end with a driving layup on which he was fouled. Polaha sank the free throw, giving Lehigh a 71-67 lead and what amounted to the game with 42 sec onds left. Forward Bruce Blake hit the front end of a one-and-one and guard Brian Allen hit a baseline jumper to draw the Lions within one, 71-70, with 22 second left, but Lehigh’s Scott Layer made both ends of a one-and-one three seconds, later to put the Engi neers back up by three. > Penn State tried several unsuccess ful desperation three-point shots, and the Engineers walked off of the court with the biggest win of second-year coach Fran McCaffery’s career. “To beat a good Altantic 10 team on the road, you have to be very excit ed,” McCaffery said after the' game. “Especially the way we handled the pressure down the stretch.” Although the Engineers handled the pressure down the stretch, they seemed to have trouble handling any thing in the first half. Allen kicked off the scoring in the game with a 16-foot jumper that gave Penn State a lead it would not give up until the 1:41 mark of the game. Center Jim Newcomer scored six points inside and guard Tony Ward scored nine to give the Lions an eight point lead, 21-13, with 10 minutes to go in the first half. Meanwhile a 1-3-1 trapping defense was shutting down Lehigh’s one-two scoring punch of Daren Queenan, (22.8 ppg coming in) and Polaha (20 ppg). The Lions opened up their biggest lead of the half,33-20, when Paul Sounds of silence not exactly golden (or quiet) at Rec Hall If you thought what happened at Rec Hall last night was ugly, you should have tried hanging around afterwards for an hour or two. The men’s basketball team self-de structed for the second time in four days and dropped a 73-70 decision to Lehigh in front of 2,010 disbelieving spectators. The fans, however, were the lucky ones. Most of them got to leave as soon as the game was over. | j leers slide by ECC for 7th straight victory I '■ Collegian Sports" Writer £ JiTsfS . I 1 1,. Collegian Sports Writer Lynn Sipe (empty net) scored later in the third his catching glove and rolled into the net before * ' T® Defenseman John D’Aloisio’s goal 7:47 into the frame, Penn State went into the semester break it out dp -f- 7/ * third period snapped a 3-3 deadlock last night as in impressive fashion. Paul . c i„ ft P nint & v Iff I the ice hockey team won its seventh straight D’Aloisio, who also dished out three assists, State past Nm t. 1 game with a 6-3 International Collegiate Hockey Said after the game that Galanti may have given spun behind the net andl stuffed the puck p t // League victory over Erie Community College in him too much room to shoot oa,s ' \ (2 « ■ 1 a penalty-filled game at the Ice Pavilion. “Their goalie was way to far to his right, and Sandwiched between thei two first period g '''S&ESSSm < I- With the win, the Lions raised their record to that gave me the whole side to shoot at,” he said. wasa display oftemp of Rass af l"-18 sending 12-3 (3-1 in the icHL) and will resume play after “Ken (Fatur) took the defensemanout of the way Yabtecki VAV 1 the holidays with a weekend series at Niagara- and I had the room to go in. I don t know how he the Erie goa'ke p mooring Yablecki Jgf 1 Welland in Ontario, Canada on Jan. 9-10. did it without them (the officials) calling a beca ™ ~ D’Aloisio put the Lions ahead for good with a penalty.” . was then mauled by a pack of angry Kats nenina Paul Coffev-like end-to-end rush that started at D’Aloisio was referring to the fact that officials the net. , , .. cnrtpH fhePe™ State blueline and ended when Ihe 5- Dave K.stek and Bob See.r whistled 29 penalties Alter a iO-minute .It.mks.rled \ foot-9, 175-pound junior blasted a wicked slap on the night, good for 102 minutes (only 38 to thingsoutand to •■l% W* shot that sailed over the glove of the Kats’back- Penn State) including 47 in the first period. Hmterberger for being the third man in t up goalie Mike Galanti and landed in the top right The Penn State winning streak appeared to be t . d = d steve W estfall hand corner of the net. Galanti had replaced in serious jeopardy when ECC jumped out to a 2-0 Early m t P - , collegian Photo/Jody stecher starter Gary Bass at the 10:46 mark of the second lead in the first period on goals by Jon and Paul scooped up a loose puck at the Erie piuenne ana Erie’s John Anderson reaches for the puck in the Kats’ 6-3 loss to Penn period when Bass suffered sprained knee liga- Gross at the 6:31 mark and 13:02 mark respec- walked in alone on Bass. The hulking 6-2 20^ State last night at the Ice Pavilion ments in a goalmouth pile-up. tively. ’ 9 At a glance LEHIGH (73) Layer 3-3 2-2 9, Queenan 8-16 6-7 22, Polaha 6-10 3-6 18, Cheslock 2- 4 0-0 4, Dowling 4-4 1-2 9, Bronner 0-0 0-0 0, Rudman 0-1 0-0 0, Martin 3-6 3-7 9, Gregory 0-1 2-2 2, Breder 0-2 0-0 0. Totals 26-49 17-26 73. PENN STATE (70) Ward 6-151-2 14, Jones 2-3 1-2 5, Allen 4-13 0-0 8, Newcomer 6-6 0-0 12, Chrabascz 2-6 0-1 4, luzzolino 0-0 0-0 0, Murphy 2-6 0-0 4, Apple man 0-0 0-0 0, Blake 2-2 1-2 5, Hovasse 1-4 1-1 3, Fogell 5-10 1-2 11, Peapos 2-2 0-0 4. Totals 32-67 5- 10 70, Halftime Penn St. 39, Lehigh 30. Three-point goals Lehigh 4-6 (Bronner 0-1, Layer 1-1, Polaha 3-4). Penn St. 1-10 (Murphy 0-2, Ward 1- 4, Allen 0-3, Chrabascz 0-1) Fouled Out Allen. Re bounds—Lehigh 38 (Martin 9), Penn St. 31 (Fogell 9). Assists Lehigh 14 (Polaha 6), Penn St. 16 (Jones 6). Total fouls Lehigh 16, Penn 5t.23. Attendance 2,010. Murphy hit a layup with six minutes left. But Queenan and Polaha opened up for Lehigh and the Engineers closed the gap to 39-30 at the end of the half. Ward finished the half with nine points for the Lions and Newcomer added eight with four-for-four shoot ing from the field. Queenan, being touted by Lehigh as a team leader and All-American candidate, paced the Engineers with 10. In the second half, the Lions opened the lead back up to 13, 48-35, with 15:42 left on a three-point jumper by Ward. Ward’s three-pointer was one of only 10 attempts by the Lions that went in during the game. Polaha countered Ward’s shot with a three-pointer of his own the next trip up the court to cut the lead to 10, and the roof slowly began to fall in on Penn'State. The Engineers chipped the lead away, again on the scoring strength of Queenan and Polaha, to tie the game, 56-56, with 10 minutes left in the game. Penn State built the lead back up to five, 62-57, over the next three minutes, but from there on out it was a case of bad shots and blown opportunities for the Lions. Lehigh set the tempo for the rest of the game, not allowing the Lions to get the ball inside, and thus shutting down Penn State’s offense. Ward paced the Lions with 14 points, although it was Newcomer who shined, hitting for 12 on six-for six shooting in the game. Queenan led Lehigh with 22 and Polaha added 20. Family and friends of the Penn State players and the media were the unlucky ones. They were the ones that thought they were going to get a chance to talk to the playprs and coaches after the contest. Maybe the family and friends finally got the chance, but members of the print and broadcast media weren’t so lucky. Lion Head Coach Bruce Parkhill refused to talk to reporters last night, leaving us to judge for ourselves what we saw on the court. The fourth-year coach certainly wasn’t at a loss for words he was still screaming pro fanities at his players one-and-a-half hours after the final buzzer had sounded. Parkhill had a right to be dis gruntled, there’s no denying that. It was the second straight lackluster and emotionless performance from a squad that started off with two mm -:iw Penn State’s Brian Allen loses the ball in Penn State’s 73-70 loss to Lehigh last night at Rec Hall, straight victories. The bottom has room. It didn’t help, but at least we dropped out since then, and the Lions heard him screaming. And, from the have a 2-3 record as they prepare for sounds of it, throwing things as the Saturday’s game at Vermont. team’s post-game meal a stack of Still, there was no reason for him to pizzas sat outside the door getting prevent the media from doing its job cold. properly. I know they say that if you The managers were even afraid to don’t have something nice to say go inside, despite periodic bursts of don’t say anything, but that’s not the silence. One suggested that Parkhill job of a coach. was taking a few minutes to allow his Even if he’d come out and just blood pressure to go down before he evasively answered one or two basic launched into another tirade, questions it wouldn’t have been as One is left to wonder what Parkhill bad as the situation was last night. If could have been saying to his club for Parkhill had done that much and then that period of time. The Lions’ play excused himself, the media would was beyond description at times as have left satisfied that we’d tried our the forwards were taking shots from best to get some type of insight about the perimeter and the guards were a game that bordered on the obscene, trying to drive their way inside for Instead, all we got was frustrated, layups. All in all, it wasn’t what you’d sitting in a small room and wondering expect from a program that was if Parkhill would ever come out. supposed to be on the way up. Finally, we stood outside the locker- ’\ I < * , < The family and friends also had to -Mm/ m ” "coUogimi Photo / Dan Oleski <■>* '1 * Ji £, '\ ,y ! '*, * *H . *« >**' "’f *' ~ ♦ V l\t T t > ~V\ ; ~ ‘\L y * - V; .. wonder what was going on. Some had the hand that feeds him, or in this driven at least an hour to watch their case the pens and microphones that sons play and it’s safe to assume they bring fans to the games, didn’t want to wait in Rec Hall forev- Scenes like last night’s do little for er to have a chance to say hello to a team looking to build a strong them. They also had to wonder about image in the area and on the national a coach who could spend the same scene. amount of time at as it took to play Now the question is: What will the the game yelling at their children. team learn from the loss and what The game took 1 hour and 40 min- will it do to keep it from happening in utes to play and Parkhill kept the the future. team in the lockerroom for at least After Sunday’s loss to Loyola of that long afterwards. And it was Maryland, Parkhill was deeply disap obvious they weren’t already watch- pointed by his team’s play and he ing the films of the horrendous loss, didn’t even make them practice on It was a performance uncharacte- Monday, perhaps wanting his players ristic of a coach that’s always done to dwell on the loss. He also told a his best to cooperate with the media, reporter he hoped the day off would Parkhill knows he needs the media’s benefit a club he said was “tired.” help in order to build support for his program and that made last night’s scene even more surprising. It was a perfect example of someone biting The Daily Collegian Thursday, Dec. 11, 1986 ~ 'ft* Jr? - * ' If Parkhill said he was distressed by his club’s lack of intensity against Loyola, it would have been interest- Please see SILENCE, Page 13. jWJ? i Kpfl ■iM ■m iv-* v
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers