Records Continued from Page 13. "On the question of titles and medals, that we feel needs more discussion." Meaning, if the proposal is adopted, Johnson would We his world records of 9.83 seconds in the 100 and 6.41 seconds in the 60 but remain champion of the two 1987 world title meets where he set the marks the World Track and Field Championships in Rome and the World Indoor Track and Field Championships in Indi anapolis. Johnson also holds world-best times in the indoor 50 yards and 50'meters, but the lAAF does not consider those distances for world records. Likewise, two other Canadian athletes who admitted drug use, Mark McK oy and Angela Issejenko, hold world bests in sprint hurdle races not considered world records. All of their testimony came at a Canadian govern ment bearing into drug use in sports, called after John son was nabbed for steroid use in Seoul and stripped of his gold medal and world-record 9.79 time. Lewis got the gold medal after finishing second in 9.92, which would be the new record if the change is adopted. "Of course we will do this for Carl," said Frank Greenberg, president of The Athletics Congress, the American track governing body, which is supporting the move. "We are fighting for the guy. We'll fight to the max." Stickwomen Continued from Page 13 the other team. Second, Newman thinks Penn State must take advantage of opportunities inside the circle and cre ate corners, which set up scoring oppor tunities. To accomplish these goals, the Lady Lions have undergone rigorous work outs, a fitness program over the sum mer and countless hours of drillwork. "I'm really enthusiastic," goalkeeper Michele Brennan said. "Each and every one of us knows ( the training) is going to pay off. Last year it took us a while. This year, the first day was like the fourth week last year. Our attitude real ly showed. We've learned to strive big time." The season begins this afternoon with a scrimmage against Lock Haven. While most positions have been settled, some are still up for grabs. The honor of starting in goal most likely will be given to Brennan, who played in 21 games last season. With a save percentage of .880 and a goals against-average of 1.008, the sophomore must be considered the favorite. Yet senior veteran Connie Ehresman, the starter in 1987, also is in the running, according to the coach. "We're fortunate to have two good goalies in our program, which not a lot of teams can boast about," Newman said. On defense, the question marks abound. With Radziftski gone, the only sure lock is captain Kathy Klein as anchor of the group. The other positions have to be earned. "Our defense is not tough enough," Newman said. "We need to mark ( bet ter) and be more aggressive. We need to get three players to do this. It's up in the air, the defense has not been set. RIDES I NEED RIDES to Buffalo, N.Y. Any weekend! S. Call Judie, 862-9147. LOST LOST: A THREE-fold black leather wallet. Lost last Tuesday, probably somewhere between Pollock and East Halls. Please comtact Jeff at 867.6657 with any information. LOST: BLACK/GREY tabby cat, 5 mos. old, female. Call 867-3656. LOST: WILSON STING tennis raquet In or near West Halls quad, 8129.862-0557, reward. FOUND "Found" notices are published for three days at no charge. This pol icy does not apply to "found" notices for "PSU" keys. If you find a "PSU" key or a key ring with a "PSU" key on it, please deliver the item to Police Services, Grange Building. The Department of University Safety has established a system to quick ly identify and notify the person who lost the "PSU" key. FOUND: GOLD AND silver watch In 108 Forum, 8128. To claim call 862-4157 and ask for Robyn. GOLD AND DIAMOND ring found on stairwell in Willard- 9/1 around noon. Call Shannon 862-1119 to identify. I FOUND YOUR watch in Boucke Bldg. Call 237-2974 to claim it. S.R. I FOUND your wallet. Call Jane to claim it. 862-7411. PERSONALS BRUNETTE WEARING GREEN on wall by College and Allen talking to older man Thursday around 3:30, redhead in green T-shirt definately noticed you. Care to meet? Reply personals. BM. DAVID C. I miss you! Can we talk, please! Love, Kerry. GNOMON, IS THERE enough room In the goretex for two? P.S. Welcome back to the whole gang! Love, Banned from the room. JEFF: I NEED an escort! You know where. Reply in person or personals. Susanne. LADIES 3RD FLOOR Jordan. Guys in T-top want to meet you. Talked about T-tops, parking lines and belt laws. Reply personals. STEFURAK, NOW YOUR 21 the party's just begun! Airborne all the way! Your twin sis. "Hopefully the players involved will step out. Those stronger in that position will play. Last year we had a similar sit uation, but it worked out." One of those players battling for the job is junior Tracy Shilkret, who played in 13 games in 1988. She sees the situa tion as something that will improve. "People are going to make mistakes, but we don't worry about it because (it will) come back," she said. Three starters return at midfield Joines on the right (one goal, one assist in 1988), Kristen Winters in the middle (four goals, two assists) and Kidder on the left ( three goals, two assists). Newman says the midfield line will be strong and because of its experience, all three players will play key roles. She added that it will have to be flexible because in some games the trio will need to play more defensively, while in others, offense will be key. On the forward line, three sopho mores have the task of providing a scor ing punch. Susann Bisignario, Eleanor Stone and Chelle Frates come into the lineup fresh from a summer at the Olympian Developmental `A' Camp. Newman said that the camp experi ence should help because in the past she has looked at opponents and said "Look, this girl's on A Camp." All the answers must be decided before the Lady Lions take to the road this weekend to face defending national champion Old Dominion, followed by Duke on Sunday. While an official poll has yet to be released, Penn State is picked to be a top-10 team. A new and experimental "power-rating" system judging strength of schedule will be imple mented this fall. COLLEGIAN CLASSIFIED ADS ST. JUDE, THANK you for prayers answered. Denise. TO THE GUY that bit my butt at the Gaff on Thursday- thanks for the interesting evening and the $5. SERVICES CHAMPIONSHIP MINIATURE GOLF & batting cages behind the Nittany Mall. Clip ad for $1 off. GREAT FOR A date, Championship Miniature Golf, 250 West Hamilton Avenue, close to campus, 238.8481. Clip ad for $1 off. SELF-DEFENSE FOR women. Learn how to avoid conflict and what to do in case you're threat ened. Tuesday 8:15-9:45 p.m., 8 weeks, State College Area YMCA Gym, $25 for members, $5O non members. COMPUTERS ALL NEW COMPUTERS for sale. Any configuration available. I will beat anyone's prices locally. Call Mark at 867-5563. COMPUTER EXCHANGE AND Rental Center buy, sell and rent new and used PC's,laptops,modems,terminal s,etc. Most brands, 231-1415. COMPUTER EXPERTISE NEEDED on Macintosh- knowledge of Hypercard, Excel, etc. Few hours per week, 234-7886. FOR SALE: 5.25/3.5" DSIDD floppy disks $.75 plus $1.50 call 238-1670 NEED AN IBM compatible com puter for the semester? Why not lease it! Prices start at only $lOO.OO per month. Call dt stop in at Microcomputer Center, 222 West College Avenue, 234-3586. Convenient, easy credit for qual ified customers. ZENITH IBM-PC Compatible 512 k ram, 2-360 k drives, amber monitor, serial and parallel ports rgb port, $625. Call Joel 1363-2336, 2348839. PARTIES DYNAMIC ENTERTAINMENT SYSTEMS with 400 club hours and over three years experience in State College. Most spectacular sound and light show around. Classic Rock, Progressive, Club, Top 40. For info and rates call 234. 2533. NY CLUB DJ'S. Parties, socials, formals, call John at 867-7031. Lewis' only world records are as part of relay tea ms. Mcßae would get the world record in the 60 for a 6.50 clocking in 1987. Johnson testified that he first took steroids in 1981 and used them in massive doses in the buildup to the Rome world championships. His testimony was enough to convince the lAAF leaders that they had to use new tactics in fighting drugs. "What has constituted a doping offense up to now has been a positive sample," Ljundqvist said. "Now we see another way admissions under oath and we feel we must be able to interfere." Another council member, Hassan Agabani of the Sudan, said the step was a "punitive measure" but necessary. "If we see someone establish a record and he is wind-assisted, we say, 'No,' " Agabani said. "Then how can we allow a person who used drugs to hold a record?" Others, however, said Johnson was a scapegoat. "Kicking Ben Johnson isn't the answer. That's just one athlete," said Herb McKinley, a 1952 Olympic gold medalist in the 900 and a leader of Jamaica's track federation. "Every country is fighting to protect its own." Don Quarry, an Olympic sprinter from Jamaica, RESUMES AITKEN ASSOCIATES: NATION ALLY recognized for professional expertise in the writing, editing, and marketing of effective resumes. 237-4508. li cALvAny L,ApTIST chinch 1250 University Dr. State College, PA 16801 Joel Goff, Pastor Phone 238.0822 Affiliated with the Baptist General Conference Come Worship and participate in Bible Study Each Sunday Morning at 9:30 Fellowship time 10:30 Bible Study 10:45 Pick-up for students at 9:15 HUB and East Halls bus stop ' HOTLINE COUNSELORS - Paid and Volunteer shifts - Excellent Training Program - Flexible Scheduling - Great Work Experience ON DRUGS, INC. 236 S. Allen St. 237-5855 Application Deadline Sept. 11 R EA D & & RECYCLE The Collegian Mother Earth Thank You. BIRTHDAYS G'DAY NICOLE, HAPPY Bday and don't get too wasted tonight! Love your best Ozzie mate. Rob. - enn a e Penn State Penn State is-, n State Pe tatel I. nn tate - tate Penn tate Penn tate Penn tate Penn tate said stripping Johnson of the world record would be "ridiculous and unfair." Cecil Smith, executive director of the Ontario Track and Field Federation, said the Canadian delegation would defend Johnson in debate on the measure. "It won't be a clearcut vote," he said. "But the effects don't stop with 1988. You keep going, and where does it stop? It's not just Ben." As originally written, the proposal to strip records could have encountered problems involving retroac tivity, since it was not on the books when Johnson con fessed. The council, therefore, based its action on the annual record reviews. The change in tactics additionally moved the propo sal into a section of lAAF bylaws requiring only a sim ple majority rather than a two-thirds vote as the original wording would have, according to federation general secretary John Holt. The council also endorsed a slight softening of track's drug penalties. It would impose three-month instead of two-year suspensions on first-time users of all drugs except steroids, hormones, amphetamines, cocaine and substances used to hide doping known as "masking agents." Current rules impose two-year bans for first-time use for all drugs except ephedrine, a stimulant found in many non-prescription cold reme dies. day Collegian Classified Information Mail-In Form • Policy Ads must be prepaid. Changes cannot be made after the first insertion. Cash refunds will only be given for ads cancelled by 1 p.m. the day before the first insertion. Only credit vouchers will be given after this time. The Daily Collegian will only be responsible for one day's incorrect insertion. Please come to room 126 Carnegie Building immediately it there is an error in your ad. The Daily Collegian will not knowingly cause to be printed or published any notice or advertisement relating to employment or membership indicating any preference, limitation, specification or discrimination based upon race, color, sexual orientation, religious creed, ancestry, age, sex, national orgin or non-job related handicap or disability. • Prepaid Order Form Ads Just MAIL in the classified order form with the correct payment and your ad will appear when requested We must receive the ad the morning before publication. No PERSONAL or BIRTHDAY ads accepted by mail. • Deadlines Classified 1 p.m. one business day before publication. Cancellation 1 p.m. one business day before publication. Renewal no later than 1 p.m. the last day the ad is to appear in the paper. Classified Mail Order Form Name Address (phone number published only if included below) Please print your ad one word per box Date ad begins Total days in paper Amount paid Classification N OF WORDS Fashionable people read Collegian ads! ALL ADS MUST BE PREPAID AND MUST FOLLOW COLLEGIAN POLICY NUMBER OF DAYS apartments attention audio automotive computers for rent for sale Academics Continued from Page 13 division of undergraduate studies); ten nis player Caroline Pierce (3.55, quan titative business analysis) ; softball players and Jodi Long (3.90, mathemat ics) and Deb Wyttenbach (3.92, educa tion). "Softball takes up a lot of time but we just learn to manage what free time we do have more wisely," explained Wyt tenbach, a sophomore from Fairfax, Va. "You just have to disipline yourself and keep your priorities straight." Skorpen, a native of Norway, credits his good study habits to the excellent educational system at home. Lai Continued from Page 13. and defensive end Garin Veris, both of whom had knee surgery Saturday, also went on IR. Under the new rules, none can return this season. As usual, it was a bad day for vet erans as well as rookies. Among the name players waived were one-time All-Pro wide receiver Cris Collinsworth of Cincinnati and the Bengals' 10-year placekicker, Jim Breech, along with a half-dozen Denver Broncos who played key roles on their two Super Bowl teams. Included in that group were wide receiver Steve Watson and running back Gerald Willhite. Another player from those Denver teams, linebacker Ricky Hunley, was cut by the Cardinals. Hunley, obtained in a trade last year, was expected to be Phoenix' starting middle linebacker but missed 12 days in a contract dispute and played poorly in preseason. Kansas City, meanwhile, cut Paul Palmer, its No. 1 draft pick in 1987. Palmer, runner up to Vinny Testa verde for the 1986 Heisman Trophy after rushing for 1,866 yards at Temple, was the' second-leading rusher and receiver for the Chiefs last year and led the AFC in kickoff returns as a rookie. Morris and Tipped may have been victims of the new injured reserve rules. Brian Washington, who started 14 of 16 games at free safety for Cleveland last year, also went on the list with a broken nose and elbow injury; Miami put placekicker Fuad Reveiz on the list, and Buffalo lost all-purpose running back Robb Rid dick the same way. Unlike previous seasons, when players placed on IR before the final cuts could have been activated after six games if healthy, those now inac tivated before the 47-man limit is established can't be activated during the season or practice with the team Phone # Classifications found (free) help wanted houses lost parties resumes The Daily Collegian Tuesday, Sept. 5,1989-19 "It's hard coming home from prac tice then studying," said Skorpen, Penn State's sixth ranked all-time scorer. "I study first then go out with friends." "The key to doing well academically is reviewing after each class and being familiar with what is going on," Wytten bach said. Soccer player Thomas Ageson (3.44, business administration), basketball player Dave Degitz (3.23, division of undergraduate studies) and baseball players Mike Killough (3.29, finance) and Matt Merkle (3.27, mechanical engineering) also achieved honorable mention. unless they go through waivers. Thus rookie quarterback Rodney Peete of Detroit, who would have been the Lions' starter, was kept on the roster though his sprained left knee will keep him out three to five weeks. Giants Coach Bill Parcells said Morris was placed on IR because he wouldn't be ready until December. "When you lose a I,oooyard rush er it's not good news," Parcells said. "It's a blow to us." Still, the loss of Morris, who gained 1,083 yards for just a 3.5 average last season, may be less damaging than it might have been in the past. Par cells is planning to use a one-back offense more often, a scheme more suited to Ottis Anderson, Lee Rou son, George Adams and rookie Lewis Tillman than to Morris. There were other casualties among name players as the league's 28 teams got down to the regular season limit. Many of those cut, however, could be brought back quickly as teams manuever with the injured reserve list. The Eagles waived Reggie Sin gletary and Matt Patchan, offensive linemen; Derek Holloway, Anthony Edwards and William Osborn, wide receivers; Lakei Heimuli, running back; David Bailey and Donald Evans, defensive ends; Joe Schus ter, defensive tackle; Dwayne Jiles, linebacker; Paul Berardelli, offen sive guard; and Alan Dial and Tyrone Jones, safeties. Pittsburgh cut Lester Brinkley, defensive end; Tracy Simien, line backer; Carlton Haselrig and Chris Asbeck, nose tackles; John O'Neill and John Stroia, offensive linemen; Cornell Gowdy, safety; Preston Gothard, tight end; Charles Lockett, Eric Wilkerson and Mark Stock, wide receivers; and Rick Storm, quarterback. Make checks payable to: Collegian Inc. 126 Carnegie Building Dept. C University Park, PA 16802 EACH ADDITIONAL CONSECUTIVE DAY rides/riders MOMS roommates sublet typing wanted wanted to rent Tlihtk "friday!" • II • D 0 N' F T 0 R G E T z;Collegian 6t. a • ow , '7 '24