opinions editorial opinion No time for silence The killing and torture have hit home Now it is time for action. Boris Weisfeiler, a Soviet Jewish emigre and Penn State mathematics professor, apparently was sucked into the maw of Chile's human rights abuses when he disap peared in January 1985 while on a hiking trip. Chilean police said Weisfeiler drowned while wading across the Nuble and Los Sauces in the southern part of the country, and his body was never found despite inten sive searches by police units, army patrols and navy frogmen. But some groups believe Weisfeiler is still alive, a prisoner in a Chilean colony that the United Nations has accused of 'housing a torture center. Several University international groups concerned about Weisfeiler's mysterious disappearance will hold a vigil at noon today on the steps of Pattee to commem orate Weisfeiler's disappearance and edu cate the University community about political oppression and torture. The Penn State Undergraduate Amnesty International Campus Network, the Under graduate Student Government's Depart ment of International Affairs and other University international groups involved are to be applauded for taking action. They will kick off a petition drive aimed at gaining national recognition for Weisfeil er. They want to get some real answers from the reluctant Chilean government, and the more names that appear on the petition . the greater the impact will be on our congressmen especially Heinz and Specter. . "This is an . attempt to show these two senators that the University is seriously concerned about Weisfeiler's, fate," said David Tubbs, former president of the Un dergraduate Amnesty International at Worthy Words I NIGINAy da th d; Collegian Wednesday April 15, 1987 ©1987 Collegian Inc. Chris Raymond Editor Glenn B. Rougler Business Manager The Daily Collegian's editorial opin ion is determined by its Board of Opinion, with the editor holding final responsibility. Opinions ex pressed on the editorial pages are not necessarily those of The Daily Collegian, Collegian Inc. or The Pennsylvania State University. Collegian Inc., publishers of The Daily Collegian and related publica tions, is a separate corporate insti tution from Penn State. Board of Editors Managing Editor Bob King Opinion Editor Terry Mutchler Assistant Opinion Editor Jim Higgins Editorial Writers Donna Saber, Kathy Casey, Christine Negley News Editors Phil Galewitz, James Stewart Copyalfire Editors Susan Kearney, Theresa Pancoast "There are two ways of spreading light: to be the candle or the mirror that reflects it." ..,GEEZI INE tLthoST MO TM GUY Al Eric Schmidt, Damon Chappie James A. Stewart Town Editor Christine Metzger Assistant Town Editor Jane Kopacki Campus Editor Nancy Funk Assistant Campus Editor Carolyn Sorisio Sports Editor Matt Herb Assistant Sports Editors Rob Biertempfel, Bob Williams Stacey Jacobson Arts Editor Beth Brestensky Assistant Arts Editor Ron Swegman Science Editor Kathi Dodson Graphics Editor Tony Ciccarelli Photo Editor Cristy Rickard Assistant Photo Editor Dan Oleski Accounting Manager K. C. McClure Office Manager Curt Sayers Assistant Office Manager Kelly Moffat Sales Manager Joe Palastro Layout Coordinator Annie Corson Marketing Manager Dante Orazzi 111 • Assistant Marketing Manager Kristy Burgess Complaints: News and editorial com plaints should be presented to the editor. Business and advertising complaints should be presented to the business manager. If a complaint is not satisfacto rily resolved, grievances may be filed with the Accuracy and Fair Play Commit tee of Collegian Inc. Information on filing grievances is available from Gerry Lynn Penn State. Tubbs said University Presi dent Bryce Jordan is also writing letters about Weisfeiler to Heinz and Specter. Also, the organizations will sponsor a film titled Your Neighbor's Son The Making of a Torturer at 7:30 tonight in 301 HUB. And human rights activist Veronica de Negri, a former Amnesty International prisoner of conscience, will speak about human rights abuses in Chile from her perspective as both a victim and mother. De Negri's son, Rodrigo Rojas de Negri, a 19-year-old U.S. student, was beaten and burned to death last spring after taking pictures of a street demonstration in his native Chile. Although the Chilean govern ment maintains it had nothing to do with Rodrigo's death, witnesses have said secu rity forces beat him and his companion, then doused them with gasoline and set them afire. Why should we care? Because a member of our community may have joined the legions of the disappeared victims of politi cal violence, and may even now be a captive in a government-sponsored torture cham ber. By raising our voices, we can help spark action that will help him and others in the same fate someday, maybe our selves. We in the United States can be thankful that we don't live under a government that uses killings and torture to silence dissent. Veronica de Negri said she too felt lucky to be. in Chile during the 19405, when the Nazis were slaughtering millions throughout Eu rope. But her example shows that no one can afford to feel too secure. This is no time for students to be silent. In our own interests, and those of human rights justice around the world, it is time to speak out loudly, for freedom. Edith Whaton, Vesalius in Zante Board of Managers Assistant Business Manager Lori Spossey Hamilton, executive secretary, Collegian Inc. Letters Policy: The Daily Collegian en• courages comments on news coverage, editorial policy and University affairs. Letters must be typewritten, double spaced and no longer than one and one half pages. Forums must also be type written, double-spaced and no longer than three pages. Students' letters should include se mester standing, major and campus of the writer. Letters from alumni should includd the major and year of graduation of the writer. All writers should provide their address and phone number for verification of the letter. Letters should be signed by no more than two people. Names may be withheld on request. The Collegian reserves the right to edit letters for length and to reject letters if they are libelous or do not conform to standards of good taste. Because of the number of letters received, the Collegian cannot guarantee publication of all the letters it receives. Letters may also be selected for publication in The Weekly Collegian. All letters received become the property of Collegian Inc. Letters 'and forums from University Park and State College: Please deliver any submissions in person at the office of The Daily Collegian; 126 Carnegie Building. All authors must be present with picture identification either Uni versity ID or photo drivers liscense when presenting the letter or forum. Mail other letters to: The Daily Colle gian; 126 Carnegie Building; University Park, Pa. 16802. Business tax Without it, What if they woke up one morn ing and we were gone? No stu dents, faculty, administrators or maintenance: just several square miles of flat, sterile asphalt where the University's buildings and lawns used to be, and lots of va cated apartments, houses and bank accounts. What would the State College business community do then? Only God and Rod Serling know for sure. I can only guess, but I guess that the parking problem would be solved, and that the pro posed Business Privilege Tax wouldn't be an issue anymore. : 2.4\ One thing is for, sure: by noon of the first day of Penn State's lock stock-and-barrel disappearance, every business in the borough would realize it was up Bankruptcy Creek without a paddle. The cap tive labor-force of students would be gone, the ever-reliable custom ers from the campus community would be gone, and the millions of dollars leeched from students who have no choice but to submit to the astonishing prices charged for lo cal rental-dwellings would also be gone. And also gone would be the days of wine and roses enjoyed by the town's merchants, entrepre neurs and other profit-oriented en tities, because as we well know without Penn State, State Col lege would be a barren little ham let. But, to the chagrin of Miami of Florida, Penn State isn't about to disappear in the middle of the night. It's going to remain, and continue to have needs that spell profit for enterprising souls every where. For this reason, State Col lege is a growing, vital community, and a choice place to set up shop. Given the socio-economic symbio sis binding the town and Penn State, how could it be otherwise? So why, if State College is such prime commercial ground, do State College businesses "vehe reader opinion Prejudiced Let's face it, the Collegian is wrong and Mary Greeley Beahm is right I myself am used to reading professional newspapers who hold their opinions for the editorial page. The Collegian, on the other hand, bombards students with their prejudiced views on every page. Like beating a dead horse, the Collegian plasters articles against South Africa as frequently as a normal paper would print summer fashion ads. Every morning, when I wake up and read a Collegian, I naturally assume (correctly) that I will see at least one article somehow blasting apartheid. I'd almost bet my rent money on it. The fact that the Collegian writes biased articles is one thing, but where does the editor get the nerve to question decisions made by Beahm? Her job is to represent a body of 64,368 Penn State students. I hate to break the news to you, Collegian, but the 50 to 150 students who desire Bryce Jordan's head on a silver platter isn't even close to a student majority. To this date I haven't seen proof that the Penn State body of students supports divestment, have you? Proba bly tomorrow some bright Collegian writer will conduct a poll and the next day headlines will scream "99 percent of the students demand divestment!" Yeah, sure, if someone goes around and asks students if they want apartheid to stop who'll say "Are you kidding? I love apartheid!" In the end, actions speak louder than words. When 100 students show up to protest trustee meetings or Mellon Bank or South Africa in general, this is a clear signal just how wrong the Collegian is. As for my opinion on apartheid, never once have I gone out to protest but don't dare accuse me of being engulfed in "Penn State apathy." I have other more important worries. When I'm not living in Happy Valley I must travel home to a community near Pittsburgh devastated by steel mill shutdowns. This dilemma, as cruel, frightening, and unjust as apartheid could ever be, is my concern and a lot more relevant than South Africa. Granted, I may sound selfish, but I would rather save my city here in the United States first. Until Penn State actually shows a majority supports divestment with more than mere words, Mary Greeley Beahm is absolutely warranted with her actions. She will continue to do her job correctly. Perhaps, one day, the Collegian will follow this example and end its policy of being biased. Until then it will never truly be the voice of Penn State but only the shouts of a distant few. Frenzy I'm writing in regard to your April 6 article on AIDS paranoia. Despite the medical facts on how AIDS can be transmitted, the public is in a frenzy. I fully agree that there is entirely too much hysteria over the AIDS issue. When I say hysteria, I am talking about the way people are handling themselves in our society: Refusing to eat in a restaurant where a chef, who worked there five years the days of wine and rose vanish mently object" to a proposed Busi ness Privilege Tax that would at 1.5 mills —'take a a mere buck-fifty from every 1,000 dollars of 'their gross profits and add it to the borough's general revenue? That is: help the town that hosts them. With the exceptions of small and new businesses, the only reason for their objection that I can believe is greed. One-point-five mills is a pittance for a business to pay for the priv ilege of operating in State College. And a privilege it is: any business that operates in this town reaps the benefits of assured profits and mu nicipal services, yet (with excep tions) gives the University and borough practically nothing in re turn. 4 i / Borough-based businesses get police protection, trash collection, sewer service, and parking areas to accommodate their customers. What do they give the borough in return? Some by virtue of their residency give only as much (through existing taxes) as their non business-owning, non profit making fellow citizens. But only some. Business owners may contribute an Earned Income Tax payment to State College if they live here. They may contribute a Real Estate Tax payment if they own prop erty here. However, they can avoid both simply by living outside the borough and renting their places of business. When they do so, their businesses become remote money collection buckets something like the buckets that Vermont farmers hang on maple trees to collect sap (ironically, State Col lege is a "Tree City USA"). Even when they do live, here, they draw more services than their non busi ness-owning fellows. It's not surprising that an "infor mal survey" by the Centre Daily Times counts 17 out of 21 Down town Business Association leaders as living outside State College; not surprising at all, given that the DBA voices the most strident oppo sition to the Business _ Privilege Tax. Unlike municipal workers who live outside State College but whose jobs directly serve State College, businesses serve only themselves: they do not "provide" the town and university with needed goods and services, they • Loran Wlodarski junior-business management The Daily Collegian Wednesday, April 15, 1987 sell goods and services, and (as should be expected in the free-mar ket system) exploit consumer de mands. They're not here out of kindness or to do us any favors, and they let us know as much when they object to a tax that would have them carry a reasonable share of the local tax burden. Those business-people who point to their on-campus "competition" as unfairly exempt from the BPT are grasping at straws in an effort to fight the tax they forget that campus businesses don't pocket profits, for personal, individual gain, that the University is a non profit institution. • They bite the hand that feeds them two-thirds of State College residents are stu dents, and obviously tied to the University, I agree with anyone who says that a way must be found to apply the BPT as equitably as. possible, taking smaller, weaker and newer business ventures into special con sideration. However, I disagree with those who say the BPT will cause busi nesses to fly from or avoid State College. The tax isn't that bad, and for every business that leaves, .10 more are waiting to fill the vacu um. Besides, who's to say the neighboring municipalities won't at some future date evoke their own BPT? I also disagree with the outra geous assertion (made by one busi nessman) that businesses "work" for the borough by collecting with olding tax from their employee's paychecks. Just try claiming such wageless "work" on your 1040. You probably consider sticking postage stamps on your mail to be work too. As I see it, opposition to the BPT has no basis in reason or principle. It's a desperate bid to keep State College a paradise for business a place where customers are abun dant and services free. The time has come for the free ride to end. The time of exploiting the University and borough at no cost has to end. It's time for State College businesses to contribute to their host-town something other than trash and sewerage. Al Blasho is a senior majoring in journalism and is a columnist for The Daily Collegian. His column appears every other Wednesday. ago, died is outrageous! What is even more ridiculous is that Rock Hudson's estate can't be sold because the actor had AIDS. People are terrified to view the home. They are afraid if they touch anything in the house or breathe the air in the surrounding area, they will contract the disease. What is the public really afraid of? This is the quation that needs to be answered. Preg nant women aren't getting the proper tests done for AIDS, birth control is not being used in a phenomenal number of sexual relationships, and the amount of illegal drug users, who continue to share drug equipment, is unbelievable! Instead of everyone complaining about the epidemic, we should take some individual initiatives in controlling AIDS. Just like any illness, people can be victimized; however, the public can take precautions against this disease. AIDS is like soap opera gossip; one rumor spreads, and we are all in state of panic. Let's stop worrying about these insignificant untruths and concen trate on decreasing the number of AIDS victims. Ignorance In his letter of March 31, Richard Weinstock claims that, "Religion is not innocuous."• Actually it is Weins tock's opinion that is harmful in three ways: He disdains the beliefs of others; his disdain is based on ignorance and prejudice; and he is determined to impose his view on others. First, Weinstock's disdain of others' beliefs is evident in that he dismisses these beliefs as "illusion" and calls his belief "the truth." How does Mr. Weinstock know that his beliefs are true? If his conclusions were based on reasoning then his own beliefs would have some credibility, but Weinstock de clares his own belief to be "obvious" and says, "I will not argue this point." He then resorts to name calling religion is for the "troubled," "uneducated" and "brain washed." Weistock's second error is that his disdain of religious beliefs (Christianity in particular) is based on ignorance and beliefs. I am a Christian and I know many other Christians who are not "troubled," "uneducated" or "brainwashed" as Weinstock suggests. What Weinstock needs to do is to discard his stereotyped views and try to learn what Christians are really like. Weinstock's third error is that he is imposing his views on others. He calls people who believe in God by derogato ry names, and he and others intend to "fight for all (they are) worth" for their cause a frightening prospect for anyone who believes in God. I hope that Mr. Weinstock as well as others who share his feelings will make the effort to learn what Christians really believe so that they may dispel the stereotypes and myths about Christians. Most Christians do not "cling to an irrational belief" but have good reasons to believe what they do, as will be evident to anyone who makes the effort to find out. Lisa Thaner freshman-telecommunications Jason Jones senior-mathematics opinions The Rat Race Skinner boxes, learned helplessness, and pushing the right buttons We're all rats Wrong? Well, wait a second, there actually is something to that. It seems as if all of us either look like or know someone who looks like a rodent; be it a rat, shrew, mouse or mole. With their beady eyes and nervous noses, their mannerisms, too, often believe their true identities. And, deep down at heart, we are all, as a race, pretty ratty. Just look at some of the heinous and weasely deeds we perform daily. Selfishness and greed grow like crabgrass among us, from the acts of the whole nation right down to the individual. ' The self comes first survival by any means, no matter how selfish or immoral. That's us. No matter if it comes at the expense ********* SUBORBQW sandwiches & Salads * The Notion's #1 Sub Chain * WE DELIVER 231-0231 ***** * * * * Tit e act I a • 430 E. COLLEGE AVE Now Offering Free Delivery • In Borough-$5 minimum 238-8177 Wednesday's Special Rigatoni with Meatballs $2.59 Printed below is the conflict final examination schedule for Spring 08:00 - 08:00 A.M. TO 09:50 A.M Semester 1987. Only those students assigned to a. conflict examination 10:10 - 10:10 A.M. TO 12:00 P.M should follow the schedule outlined below. All other students will have 12:20 - 12:20 P.M. TO 02:10 P.M their final examinations at the time and place announced in the originally 02:30 - 02:30 P.M. TO 04:20 P.M published schedule. 04:40 - 04:40 P.M. TO 06:30 P.M 06:50 - 06:50 P.M. TO 08:40 P.M designations used in the conflict 09:00 - 09:00 P.M. TO 10:50 P.M The interpretation of the time examination schedule is as follows: 202 1-2 221 1 222 1,2 403 1 101 1-27 104 1-30 206 1-7 327 1,2 438 1 453 1 460 1 028 1 105 1 001 1 021 1 045 2 001 1 001 2 297 A 1-21 243 2 301 1-20 003 1 004 1 033 1 041 1 102 1-19 222 1 473 1-4 479 1 230 1,2 240 2 244 1-4 271 1-2 345 2,3 351 1 370 1 432 1 108 3 108 4 CH E 302 2 CHEM 013 1-3 034 1 038 1 7 56( wet' i®Fot (Da The Office of The University Registrar Announces The Spring 1987 Conflict Schedule Appt Appt Appt Appt 158 WILLARD 71 WILLARD T 6:50 P.M. F 10:10 A.M APPT 208 WILURD F 8:00 A.M APPT APPT 73 WILLARD R 10:10 A.M 209 WILLARD T 06:50 P.M 203 WILLARD W 02:30 P.M 350 FREAR 271 WILLARD T 06:50 P.M T 08:00 A.M APPT APPT APPT M 10:10 A.M W 10:10 A.M APPT 165 WILLARD 350 FREAR APPT APPT APPT APPT APPT APPT APPT W 12:20 P.M 106 SACKETT 109 OSMOND T 04:40 P.M APPT APPT of those acting selflessly what stands be tween us and what we want has got to go, and those in our way are swarmed mercilessly. But it's not our fault. We're all rats Back in 1904, a woman had a baby boy, and named him Burrhus F. Skinner. As a child, Burrhus was fascinated by critters that crawled, walked or flew. He used to eat bugs, and he would constantly bring home small animals and show them to his mother, making some unintelligible comments about why they did what it was they did. Burrhus' mother passed the child off as a lazy, rampantly imaginative daydreamer, and a source of perpetual annoyance and embarrasment. She may have even beaten him, I don't know. But Burrhus held fast to his ideas. In fact, he went on to devise the Skinner box, a contraption with two pressable levers in which ol' Burrhus would place his rats. If the rats pressed the right lever, he would reward them with a piece of cheese; if they pressed the wrong lever, he would do unplea sant things to them like giving them electric shocks. (Freudians generally agree this was brought on by Skinner's domineering mother, but that's another story.) At any rate, the little buggers learned which levers to press. So why are we rats, eh? CMPSC 101 101 101 203 211 COMM 150 ECON 002 002 004 004 004 302 302 302 304 323 333 342 351 E E 220 251 271 365 368 415 458 472 E MCH 011 012 013 ENGL 100 104 133 E SC 314 FD SC 106 FIN 301 305 306 408 FOR 475 FR 002 003 F SC 424 GEOSC 020 L 040 330 GER 001 003 4, You don't have to miss— _SUß r_ • ii ,'" DAVID BYRNE STUDENT UNION BOARD .A . 41,....! _... , of TALKING HEADS fame ..):,- just because it's Easter wr - "HILARIOUS! ONE OF THE WILDEST, igWEIRDEST PICK-ME-UPS OF THE YEAR!" "Brilliant! A triumph! Provocative, dizzying, A satisfying and, above . ; all, tremendousfunl" v vzvV MAGAZINE, .t .p 1) Special shows! ek WEDNESDAY and THURSDAY .4 - 7 & 9 (te, ~ : s- HUB Assembly Room *. also Fri, Sat 7,9, 11 Sun 7, 9 only $2 # 1 APPT 2 APPT 5 APPT 1-19 F 04:40 P.M 1-2 APPT 1-3 T 02:30 P.M APPT R 12:20 P.M. APPT APPT APPT APPT APPT R 10:10 A.M. T 02:30 P.M. APPT R 02:30 P.M. APPT APPT 4-5 1-2 1,2 1,2 T 10:10 A.M T 08:00 A.M APPT APPT W 08:00 A.M APPT APPT W 10:10 A.M 1-8 R 04:40 P.M 6-9 APPT 1-4,6,8 APPT 1 APPT 1 APPT 1 APPT 1-3 W 12:20 P.M 1 APPT 1-17 R 04:40 P.M 3,5 APPT 1-5 R 10:10 A.M 1-3 T 10:10 A.M 1 APPT 1-7 APPT 1-11 APPT 1 APPT 1-4 M 04:40 P.M 1-8 APPT 1 APPT 1-7 APPT 1-6 APPT "Deep down at heart, we are all, as a race, pretty ratty." Well, we're not at all different from Skin ner's rats in the box. We all are victims of circumstance, willingly or not. Whether it's work, school or (pardon my grandiloquence) life itself, everything we do goes on inside a big Skinner box. Every point in our life is a decision a lever to press. Thank God experience lets us guess right most of the time. Should I go to college? Press a lever; get a nice piece of cheese. Should I study hard and be a conscientious student? Press a lever; ditto. Should I stay at the Phyrst until 3 a.m. the night before my Physics midterm? Press a lever; get a nasty shock. Pretty simplified, maybe, but valid rea soning nonetheless. This is the way we live, the way we have to live to survive. Though we might not always like to believe so, we are at the mercy of our environment (vis a. vis 269 WILLARD 151 WILLARD 209 WILLARD 315 WILLARD 73 WILLARD 167 WILLARD 203 E E WEST 201 E E WEST 313 E E WEST 227 E E WEST 210 HAMMOND 208 HAMMOND 269 WILLARD 151 WILLARD 218 WILLARD 21 DEIKE M - MONDAY, MAY 4, 1987 T - TUESDAY, MAY 5, 1987 W - WEDNESDAY, MAY 6, 1987 R - THURSDAY, MAY 7, 1987 F - FRIDAY, MAY 8, 198/ S - SATURDAY, MAY 9, 1987 MI S 431 6 APPT 431 9,10 APPT NAVSC 302 1-3 402 1 NUTR 100 1-4 251 1-3 OPMGT 210 1 PH ED 480 1-2 PHYS 202 L 2-3 203 L 1-2 204 L 1-2 419 1 PL SC 415 1 438 1 PN G 480 1 PSY 002 1 QB A 101 1 101 3 102 1-2 102 3 451 1-2 R EST 301 2 RUS 001 1-2 SOC •001 1 001 2,3 003 5 SPAN 002 1-14 003 1-11 305 1 SPCOM 305 1-2 380 1 STAT 100 1-2 APPT 200 1-5,19-21 APPT 301 2 APPT 401 1-2 F 10:10 A.M. 208 WILLARD 451 1 APPT 460 1 APPT THEA 100 1-2 R 10:10 A.M. 167 WILLARD 109 1,3 T 10:10 A.M. 217 WILLARD 109 2 APPT Skinner box) and our thoughts and actions carried out to keep us comfortable and safe within it. There's a term that psychologists bat around known as "learned helplessness." Basically, learned helplessness is being in a Skinner box where both of the levers give you a shock. You know, just like life. We spend our lives learning what's right and what's not, what buttons to push and which ones not to, how to get what we want. We get pretty good at it, too. And then you start seeing things clearly, seeing that the levers don't work at all, and inside your box there's nothing you can do as everything spins out of control. Poverty, unemployment, social discrimina tion, finals, the Moral Majority, impending war whatever all rain down upon us as our parents, bosses, administrators and gov ernments stand above us like Burrhus with a sprinkling can. Pass the cheese, please. Todd S. Christopher is a sophomore major ing in English and a columnist for The Daily Collegian. His column appears every other Wednesday (and if we like it, he gets a piece of cheese). U.S.G. Departments of International and Political Affairs with the assistance of Penn State Undergrad Amnesty International present the film "Your Neighbor's Son, The Making of a Torturer" Wednesday, April 15 301 HUB 7:30 p.m. Admission is Free 0364 Conflict examinations have been determined by the University Registrar. Instructors will announce to those students for whom conflict examinations have been scheduled. The time and place of a conflict examination for courses listed by appointment (Appt) should be arranged between the students and the instructors concerned at a mutually convenient time, but in no case in conflict with any other scheduled final examination, or at a time which would create three final examinations on the same day. W 10:10 A.M 108 H DEV F 08:00 A.M. 18 H DEV F 02:30 P.M. 369 WILLARD R 06:50 P.M. 358 WILLARD R 06:50 P.M 358 WILLARD APPT APPT APPT M 12:20 P.M. 271 WILLARD T 12:20 P.M. 167 WILLARD APPT R 10:10 A.M 67 WILLARD APPT APPT The Daily Collegian Wednesday, April 15, 1987-9 Please Write Are you angry at a recent edito rial, article or column printed in The Daily Collegian and are your friends are thoroughly bored with the fact that you've rehashed it at dinner for the last three nights in a row.? Don't bore your friends or ruin a good dinner, write a letter-to the-editor and let others in Happy Valley know what's on your mind. The Daily bolle g ian welcomes letters from students, faculty, staff, alumni, and area residents concerning current issues and ideas locally, nationally or inter nationally. All letters should be typed, doubled-spaced, and no longer than two pages. If you believe a topic merits more of an in-depth statement then you may submit a forum. Forums also should be typed, double-spaced, but may be up to three pages long. Author or authors should in clude name, ID number, local address and telephone number on each letter. Writers should sub mit their letters in person to the Collegian office in 126 Carnegie during business hours. APPT APPT APPT APPT APPT APPT 001 010 010 020 155 175 APPT T 02:30 P.M W 10:10 A.M APPT T 08:00 A.M APPT T 04:40 P.M APPT APPT R 06:50 P.M 9, 13 8 2 5 19 2 15 9 7 9 R 12:20 P.M APPT W 04:40 P.M R 04:40 P.M R 04:40 P.M W 02:30 P.M APPT T 12:20 P.M T 08:00 A.M APPT 1,3,4,6 R 08:00 A.M W 10:10 A.M 127 SACKETT 67 WILLARD 210 HAMMOND 209 WILLARD 67 WILLARD 273 WI LLARD 102 MCALSTR 62 WILLARD 62 WILLARD 214 BOUCKE 102 MCALSTR 151 WILLARD 103 MCALSTR 101 WALKER
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