r o—Col egian Anniversary Section Tuesday, April 14, 198 T c :=M 0 0 YEARS Nov. 14, 1968 Bide:Oth(6:;.:Etis.V . To.oighti, Ais-Miliviers. .a...Hiaimi.-.. , . •4 4. By PAUL LEVINE - ed in little groups and • formed d efen s ivei • •." . Collegian Editor strategy. As the account 'spread from mouth to mouth, the story changed. One version • Penn State coeds are alive and hiding in predicted that seven coeds would be mur their residence halls. dercd last night. Another said Jeane Dixon At least that's where they' were last had appeared on the NBC Tonight Show night when, the grisly rumor of impending Tuesday night to make her' predictions,• and ax-murderi , swept the • women's dorms. , some people said she. appeared on the Today Coeds had been jittery all day after they Show yesterday. . . . heard the tale allegedly reporting Jeane • And at least one University coed told Dixon's • latest prognostication: 12 coeds • her friends that her ouija board had pre will be axed to death on a central Pennsyl- • . dieted the ax-wielder would strike Lyons , vania campus between Nov. 24 and Dec. 7. Hall. . . ' . The origin of the story is still in doubt, / •Not on Wired. '' ' • . . but '• the . rumor covered the campus.faster ..' 'Both ' major wire I servites • . 'denied than a`. November blizzard. It. spread from• distributing the Story. ' :. • • table to table.in• the Lion's Den of .the Hetzei ."The rumor has, spread .about N schools in Union Building,• and before long the story Virginia, Tenneisee and 'New York," said grew's,ctgdin*tillY4. chatter. in...the...HUß .is. c0n...... Robert. G a telyi, .of .United , brcss.:ln terna Lionel fined,46aggriblng :hbw.:gclod the" football ' . in Chicago. "We're trying to find . kit where team is, or. how bad last week's 'date was, :it started. • byt . yesterday, the talk was of mass murder. • UPl's Washington bureau told The Daily •' • • t.' Manor Dispelled • Collegian that it'"won't touch" Miss Dixon's Yt Wasn't'until Timothy Langston, direc- predictions. The. Associated Press has• a tor of 'residence halls programs, placed a similar policy. call td' 'Washington that• the rumor was "We don't pick up Jeane Dixon at all," dispelled. Jeane Dixon's office denied that • said Ward. Sims, of AP's Philadelphia Bu the fanied astrologist ever 'had ' made the. : reau. "She's a little out of the realm of the prediction, hcCording to Langston. The office news business." did say, however, that colleges .from all , University coeds should be' breathing partg of Pennsylvania 'had called, asking easier tonight. No deranged ax-wielders are about the story. • lurking in the shadows of Old Main. • A hoax, • • The rumor was still spreading through not a holocaust; has struck, the Happy. Val the residence halls last night as coeds huddl- ley. April 17, 1936 CAMPUSEER' Society: . Mr. William Bailey and his bride (nee Slcippy Baxter), who were married Tuesday in Cumberland, Md., were entertained by * a charming gathering of a coterie of their friends in the back room 'of H;lin's Wednesday night, Don Sanders, Jimmy Dugan, and Frankie Hillgartner talias the Sex-crazed Wom tat of Brazil)poured. • . • A Farewell to Yarns: With electrons to the ,Senior staff of this sheet scheduled for Sunday night, the year during which I have scoured the dregs of humanity to pound out this column ends and by a process of reincarnation an other will take over this department. My troubled spirit will float to the traditional Limbo of Ex-Cam puseers to join the tribe of intellectual derelicts which traces back beyond Beatty and Stegmaier through the misty ages to the slaves who carved their stutron:the stone columns of Egyptian temples. It's always the prerogative of the aged to counsel youth with worthless advice. So I leave mine to . my successor in the form of a few definitions for a monu mental "'Revised Collegiate Dictionary" which I re cently conceived, but decided in the interests of Amer ican literature not to publish: College administration—An interlocking director ate of Formulators of Policies, Executors of Plans, and Makers of Decisions. Conservatism—The crust of reaction present in most departments which acts as a buffer between the administration and the student body. Chaperone—A person who can do as he or she pleases at a social function without interference. Jan. 4, 1977 IfidDlTlOft italegian coupons a Last w eek, the Centre Daily Times - tidied:off a big coupon campaign. i . liadiit'et spots, advertisements and Ivirfiri article on the front page of O(4MT-heralded the great values lialfable • if readers use the ad- Nitiging :coupons published in that oeispaper: a.This did not sit well with the Penn syliOdia Mirror, the CDT's morning toppefition. The Mirror • has 7 setalated with radio spots that praise Aet.Mieror's news coverage, fpfa,.ding readers that "there's' motto life than coupons" a . tedscinable assumption. $1 64 f 1 :- 4 4 Mr. Bursar' This coupon is ;dr. ft - '::.i.tiiredeemable at any local outlet of (1111 OR the Penn State University. .*FALL, WINTER, Et SPRING TERMS $1 OFF ......." ".., .............. . What's Inside Arr4iii._ g fines' page 5 iChiglisin living page 6 iWtEs:Match photos page S i '; page 9 'ig a house page la 4,- - eaurant review page H Mark :. page 15 cut above the rest But what newspaper is the coupon king of Centre County? To determine the answer; we relied on the wholly unscientific and unfair method of checking yesterday's papers. The • news is a bit surprising. The Daily Collegian won. In yesterday's paper, the Collegian ran two coupons valued at a total of $15.50. The Centre Daily Times had eight coupons which could save consumers more than $6.15 (one coupon didn't list 'savings) and the Mirror came up empty handed. But then,. there's more to life than coupons. • FULL TIME TUITION * Weather Mostly cloudy today and tonight with periods of snow. The heaviest snow will fall later this afternoon and early tonight, accumulating to two or three inches by late tonight. High today 28 and low tonight 28. Partly cloudy on Saturday. High 30. Sept. 9, 1937 .OLD , m ;,.m.. Most Quoted. Penn- State. Expression:. Head. football coach Bob. Higgins, 1930-31-32,33-34- 35-36=;71 "This is the•year;" Fuhny Story About aiCoach: Out: at the Centre• Hills• Country. Club the , other. day, a Philadelphiaite.,(thing..yorn. Philly). was being: intrcducid to basketball coach John Lawther, Said the introducer, "Meet Penn State's ?vim ,basketball cnach." Said• the • •termite (pardoii, Philudelphiskiti), "That's good, you boys 'certainly did need a new coach. I saw State play down• at the Palestra lash winter, and did. they stink—they were lousy:" . Imagine his embarrassment when he learned Coach Limner was new last year, not. this. Most Abused , Thing About Town•.; . •c , o ' • , Se::. lltcs( Discussed Thin! , About Town: • Se::. Most Used Thing Mina - Town:. Sex. Sex Begun Here and Can:pitted' Elsewhere: Just oddles and addles of lads and:lassies took the ultimate plunge during the summer ninths and will end up; no doubt, the possessors of big., healthy chil- dren some 'day: Let's keep things down - to a dull roar The Nittany Lion you see today may not be the Nittany Lion you see tomorrow. In fact, he may not be the Nittany Lion at all. According to sources close to the mane, mascot Andy Bailey will be graduating this year and the Lion's suit is up for grabs. But tryouts to fill Bailey's paws will have a new twist, this year. Each of the applicants for the position will don the suit and perform at a sporting, social 'or spiritual event this term. Few people will know whether they are watching the real lion or a clever facsimile. The idea is to observe how well the candidate can imitate the Lion's style, as well as the crowd's reaction to the Lion hopeful. But they can't fool us. You can't hide those lion eyes. "Who in hell plays Monopoly in a bathtub?" That question, posed rhetorically by Tau Kappa Epsilon fraternity member Jeff Baker, should be an swered this weekend. Baker is chairman of TKE's 48-hour Bathtub Monopoly Marathon, set to start at 7 tonight. The marathon will be for the benefit of the American Cancer Society. Baker says two people will Rubber ducky, Park Ave. clash at TKE April 30, 1946 Co-edib ,"He. who eavesdrops hears no good of himself" . ", and the p Sigs. have % learned by experience how true thig,iis. It seems th at brbthers, at an informal party at the house 'Saturday night, tit up a sort oof intercom system from the "Litt:e Girls' Itop!n!: to ppi . stairs room. Since their guests were unaware of the arririgeMent, results were very interesting, but who }chows' what .rectercpss there may be? Alpha Zeta Revives Alpha Zeta, agriculture frater nity, I,s being reactivated, and a ceremony is planned for June 8, at which time the charter will be restored. Officers for the revived organization wil be: Bob Wilson, president; Tom i Church, vice president; Robert Johnson, sec cretary, and Robert Beecher, treasurer. The .Tekes entertained the ChiOs Sunday afternoon and the Delta Sigs have invited the AOPi pledges out for dinner Thursday night. It was Children's Day at the AChiO suite Saturday after-' coon .when the .coeds played hos tess to the younger set, ages vary ing from 4 to 8, from Woodycrest. For Men Only "It, seems strange to have enough men on campus to make practical a "stag weekend" such as that of the. Beta Sigs. From Thursday to Sunday the house was given over to the 120 alums! who returned for this first Alumni Weekend since the ward Actives took refuge wherever they could find rooms, even re sorting to visiting rival fnater-• nities, but they didn't seem t mind, for they have been raised on the ,slogan, "Remember East er Sunday." This motto dates: back to Pearl Harbor, at .whichl time the,then,active brothers had it written into the minutes that. there would be no future alumni' April 30,.1946 No Dating Is . Strict Rule Of Happy Bachelor's Club , By LEWIS STONE (Ed. Nole: This story concerns men only. it's true—Then why does it appear on Women's Page? Well, zwhat is a woman's main interest? That's right—Men! 'Twas Sattirdainight and all through the borough all the men were out with their coeds bent on pleasure. But, no, not all! A . figure slumped dejectedly in a Corner Room booth, muttering, "Saturday Night is .the Loneliest Night in the Week,". into his double-rich chocolate malted. The cause of his woe was a frat Pin, which had reposed on a shapely sweater less than 24 hours - before. Three dateless companions, fraternity brothers who had also felt the fickle linger of fate ad ministered by a female, consoled him, while befouling the atmos phere with tale after sordid tale of woman's perfidy, Suddenly, , an earth-shattering idea was born.."Let'sform a club," cried one of the valiants.• Quick assent tumbled from the mouths of thd others. "What shall we call it?" Name after name was brought up and rejected from "Amalgamated Wo mel" Haters of Nittany Valley" to "Misogynists, Incorporated." Final un2nimous agreement was reached. icor "The Huppy Bachelors Club."' An election of officers-produced the following unanimous results: Frrnk Sipe, president; Phillip Zoeller, • vice-president; Thomas Botsford, secretary; an•d Frederick I:Wertz, treasurer. A historian was later added when the society ex. panded. • sit in six inches of water throughout the marathon, taking six hour shifts. If they succeed in going the full 48 hours, it will be a record. The event is certified by the Monopoly Marathon Records Documentation Committee (yes, really). Throughout the marathon, TKE will hold an open house and will collect donations. Anti cancer literature will be available. It promises to be a better game than the Super Bowl. Minutae: Oswald has a heavy job A Collegian reporter met with University President John W. Oswald this week while working on a story. Oswald greeted the reporter and asked him to "pick up this briefcase.", Our reporter, a strapping six footer, 'stood up and tried to lift the briefcase. He could barely move it. Oswald laughed. Now, he said, you have some idea of how much work I do. • • • Our reporter later estimated that the briefcase weighed 40 pounds. We figure it contained a couple of bricks, or perhaps several dining hall rolls. A United Press International story last week seems to show that tuition is a steal in more ways than one. According to the story, "it costs more to keep a youngster in jail then to send him to a swanky college." Los Angeles officials computed the cost of keeping a juvenile in jail is $21,000, 2)ori3 ' Slows,. gatherings until the war was over, and that the first Easter fol-, lowing the close of the war, there would be an alumni banquet. Be cause of - the Easter vacation, this event had to be postponed until Saturday night, but those who at- . tended the dinner at the Brock erhoff Hotel in Bellefonte, main tain that "it was Worth the watt." And congratulations to Howic? Back who won the chapter's an nual fr es hman achievement award, based on .scholarship and activities.. ri=M And to- Attie Stober . •goes the rather ,dubious - • distinction of having. gone .through the Corner. Room's revolving door 291' suc cessive times without pushing. Artie, who returned - this, semester from •Army • service, says ' that this record was • established in the spring of • '44. • Margie Thomas would .pi ably tell you that it pays to k how to cook, or perhaps it's a coincidence that she is a tany Co-•oper and has just cently become engaged. , "man" Robert Folk, is alsc Nittany Co-oper. Experience -...The lead AChiO ' recently elected ' following officers: Doris kins, president; Nancy and anne Harrington,. co:Nice-pi The embryo organization's char ter was drawn up and duly coun tersigned by its officers on a Cor ner Room doily, which is now en shrined in the president's cham bers. 'Rules are simple: no dating, with a fifty cent fine for each vio lation. Deep sadness has prevailed among the members because of the vice•president's forced depanture from school as a result of being molested by too many . women. After a suitable period of mourn.- ing for the late-departed, an elec tion. swill be held to allthe vacated' post. Prospective members are asked 'to contact any of the officers at the Sigma Phi Epsilon • house, an— nounces President Sipe: . A raw' deal from one or more Coeds is• the only qualification, but'approval: of all members is. required. . "And the initiation :is quite . rugged," murmured Secretary. Botsford.- • All the rest shouted,. 4,Amenr far more than Ivy League room and board of $B,OOO a year or Penn State's $2,500. Which only proves that there is a difference between Penn State and the State Pen. • This year's Datematch canlpaign is coming to a close, and Jim Minarik is pleased. Minarik, USG business manager, said close to 2,500 people had signed up for Datematch as of noon yesterday, a "substantial" decrease over last year at that time. Last year, a total of 4,485 signed up to be. matched with the opposite sex by computer. Today is the deadline for signups, although Minarik did not rule out possible extension of the deadline. Planned Parenthood has gone too far One or more thieves who hit GrahaM's Sunoco Tuesday night aren't very rich. Nor are they likely to cause unwanted pregnancies. You see, they made off with the ser vice station's prophylactic machine. The machine, whiCh was valued at ;140, was reported stolen to State College police at a.m. Wed nesday. The machine contained lots of condoms, but no money the machine's cashbox had just been unloaded. ' • • Reported motive:. their mothers had always told them to wear their rubbers in the snow. • Sept. 22, 1922 RESOLUTIONS ENDORSED BY STUDENT COUNCIL . ... Whereas. public interest has been focused upongambling in con- . nection., with fOotliall • games through comments and discus-: • . skins- in the newspanere and magazines, and • . • • • • ;••• • N • Whereas, betting - and gambling if: • not restrained will seriously in jure, the standing of intercolle-.. (date football, and b :` , . • -.; • • Whereas; betting and .gainoilPirt' prevents the development •ef— beet type of college spirit , (a) By substituting expected- . • on of .persOnal lain or. loss,. • ••• ; (b) By making it less easy *to . appreciate and applaud the good' s :, • work of the opposing . • ' (c) By making' it dl fi lcult fOi • those who bet to loge with the' • good feeling of true sportsman ship, and Whereas, gambling violates the spirit of• true.brotherhootil . should , characteriie .:*atione.‘ • ships between Christie*. insti-. • tutions, therefore be ••• • Resolved, that the StudenhCoun- , ell go on record as • ed to gambling and botigng connection with football games, and be it further Resolved, .that these resolutions be referred through the COL LEGIAN to the various campus organizations and , fraternities . with the suggestion that "Wai ler action by them would prove a -benefit to Penn State spirit and the game of football.' • Dec. 15, 1948 • Obedient Pledge Brings Home - The Beef Some• folks take orders with mental reservations; others take them literally. Art Smulowitz, a * pledge at Pi. 'Lambda Phi-fra ternity, clearly belongS in the latter class.. • Smulowitz, ,s,f ter being- relieved of his wallet and armed with a fearsome water-gun ; was told' to go out and bring back a cow - the time, 1:30 a.m. Monday. • ' ' At 4 a.m., when not a brother was stirring, not even the'pledge master, _ Smulowitz .returned, chatged into Ray Singer's room and said, "Your potential beef steak is outside, sir," or words.to that effect. Like most men awakened bi fore dawn has meandered into the Nittany valley. pledge-mister. Singer made short shrift of the matter. "Go on back to bed," he. told Smulowitz. • This set the stage for the break fast-time surprise received by the residents of Pi Lamb house, when their• glance into the back yard was met by that of a brown-and white heifer, looking vaguely bored in a new blue-and-white truck. A farmer retrieved the heifei and truck at 8:30. That would end the incident but for the fact filet no one - except Sntulowitz, perhaps - yet knows how he ac complished his mission. "An order 'is an order," was Smulowitz's• only comment. The heifer just mooed. • Taste test offers food for thought It's the oldest trick in the book. You lure them with a free ice cream cone. and then • And then you give them a taste test. at least if you're a Food Science 404 class. Six hundred people par ticipated in taste tests in Borland Lab yesterday, all for a free Creamery ice cream cone. - • • Participants first signed 'consent forms, similar to forms signed during swine flu • inoculations without mention of death or paralysis. Then, participants were given foods to sample. Some people got chocolate milk. Some people got little ice cream sundaes. This reporter had two sundaes, one marked "P" and the other marked "K." "P" tasted better. • Joseph H. Mac Neil, professor of food science and instructor in the course, said the purpose of the test was to teach students how to conduct similar experiments.. Previous tests have included soft drinks, ham burgers and milk. • • Members of the clash are assem bled into a company with research and development, marketing and sales departments. After the tests are conducted the data are fed into a' computer, and the "company" decides whether it wants to produce chocolate syrup "P" or "K." • • The consensus of those questioned yesterday was that the taste test, while less than scrumptious, was well worth the effort. • _ 074 11.. A And the. winner dritlbagt.CM 4W5k.. 4 2P...g 4 M enza.sl;:t.ar:Ft COLLEGIAN 100 YEARS AprillBB7•Aprill9B7 Collegian Anniversary Section Tuesday, April 14, 1987-21 A" , 01,0 cd;;Pnz•"ca:tW CdP O A -4 %:M0 C.C."o:•''‘W) U:Png)''''tM9 %I=w"(l6 7 " , ttUO 4 `dl - Gb - wiztWO C , '"db"'tkl.go l C:tTM`arZ&P IS . • • The Daily Collegian! the daily ',sat elicc.AP-•ZIV CilUs.CP.de:Pb 4:21;:bh. , :k:).•02D aliZtft.W..• When you picked up your copy of The Daily Collegian today, you picked up one of the very best college newspapers in the country. For, much of the past century, Collegian has been recognized nationally with hundreds of top honors in major competitions. The past months have brought Collegian continued success and recognition. *1986 Regional Pacemaker Award for excellence in journalism. The Pacemaker Award is sponsored jointly by the Associated • Collegiate Press and the American Newspaper Publisher's Association. A Regional Pacemaker Award is based on excellence in news content and coverage, opinion content, graphics, photography and editing. In November 1985, Collegian was awarded a National Pacemaker, selected from a possible 500 entrants. Six Pacemakers were awarded in 1985. * 1986 Trendsetter Award for excellence in business and advertising. This award is sponsored by the College Newspaper Business and Advertising Managers (CNBAM). Out of 160 CNBAM members, only one Trendsetter is named each year. The 1986 award, the second we've received since 1980, was based on The Daily Collegian's training programs, marketing and sales efforts, and effective overall • management. We are pleased to be honored by our peers in the college newspaper industry, but our search for quality doesn't end at an awards ceremony. For us, each issue is a product of the teamwork of 300 staff members in 21 departments working around the clock. Each publication day we work together to bring you the very best newspaper we can produce. Many generations of staff members have dedicated themselves to bring about the evolution of today's Collegian from The Free Lance, which began in April 1887. Through the example of their commitment, we have learned to accept each award as a sign of recognition that very hard work will be rewarded. We have also learned that the legacy we leave future generations is more than a trophy case full of hardware; the true reward is a respect for serious commitment and an appreciation for the experience each staff member takes away from Collegian. Many people have contributed to our success, and we would like to thank you: ri To the people of The Pennsylvania State University. You provide an atmosphere that allows excellence to flourish. M To the faculty and staff of the Penn State School of Communications. Your interest and encouragement are greatly appreciated. • MI To the Collegian alumni. Our appreciation of your tradition of quality and dedication keeps us inspired. We will strive to continue to honor that tradition. ®To our readers and advertisers, who provide the reason and means for our endeavors. We hope you enjoy reading your copy of today's issue. ollegian