Megan Continued from Page 1. Hartline (senior-chemical engi neering). While people in Pennsylvania question this new law, the debate between community safety and the rights of offenders who have paid their debts to society has continued to rage in Megan's home state. The New Jersey statute has met with opposition in the courts. On the very day the Pennsylvania House passed its law, New Jersey was defending the concept of noti fication in federal court. Harold Rubenstein, a New Jer sey attorney, said he feels the law is an excessive punishment. "These are convicted sex offend ers who have served their time," he said, adding that he is also con cerned about vigilantism. The most serious New Jersey case of vigilante violence occurred in Phillipsburg, Warren County several months ago. Frank Busci, a Warren County chief assistant prosecutor who han dles the implementation of Megan's Law for the county, said two men were drinking one evening, shortly after they were notified that a sex offender had moved into their neighborhood. Having learned about their new neighbor's past, they decided to do something about it. The two men knocked on the door and proceeded to beat the man who answered it, but the man was not the offender, Bucks said. "These two individuals under the influence were convinced they had the right guy," he said. Since the incident, New Jersey officials have taken steps to pre vent another incident. In spite of the vigilante inci dents, New Jersey law-enforce ment officials have already seen the law pay dividends. Several months ago a group of girls were frightened by a suspi cious-looking man driving a black car near a school bus stop. In New Jersey, all convicted sex offenders are required to register with local law enforcement. The registries are used as a tool by police in sex offense investigations. When the girls reported the inci dent, the only detail they could remember was the car, Busci said. "It just so happens the next town had an offender who owned an 'BB black Camaro," he said. OMNI NUM AIM 0111.• MOM 1111 M. C difO r ik Vel / CP 4 O I A 4ta. 1 Not valid w/any other coupon or spacial Must present coupon when ordering. Expires November 5, 1995 I 254 E. Beaver Ave. 234-7400 I Free Delivery i L 1 1 am - 1 1 pm 7 Days a Wei* Business Continued from Page 1 permarkets took that business away from the corner market and forced them to either adapt or per ish. And adapt is what Stone is telling small businesses to do. Businesses can compete with the likes of a nationwide retailer, and even take advantage of their prox imity to a Wall-Mart if they avoid head-to-head competition, Stone said. The chains tend to pull in shoppers from a wide area, and the resulting rise in traffic can benefit certain businesses. For example, furniture stores tend to report an upswing in sales after a Wal-Mart opens nearby, Stone said. "Wal-Mart really doesn't carry furniture, just small things you put Shake-up Continued from Page 1 money to see the changes through, he added. But Spanier said the restructur ing of the CES is not about cutting the budget or axing jobs. Instead, he said, it is about getting the Uni versity organized. "We're undertaking this study with a realistic sense that re sources are tight," Spanier said. "We are ready now to begin looking at the possibility of delivering our services differently and organizing ourselves differently." Some of the options proposed to the Altoona Campus are to continue CO *1 Continued from Page 1. The CES continued to grow steadily because of the communi ty's educational needs and ambi tions, Hosler said. "There has been constant evolu tion," he said. "The needs of the society and the needs of the stu dent keep changing." As students and community needs evolved, so did the structure of the CES; by 1966, enrollment increased significantly. Many new campuses were added and dorms were also constructed at a few locations. Because of the rise in enroll- U CO izi • AOTI • DK • AOll • DK • AOFI • lIDE • AOll • EADE • AOll • YOE • [4 0 VI Ic tLe Sisters lot AOH,O •• G O From the !Alio Clue to A the ALISiC3II Chairs An/ Eche 131111 to the Caw Cowl Batts to 'you (--) Creelc Sind 'IJ is 3 'week not A krlcitteu.• The UrcitUers et - ESE VI • Aon • EiZE • AO When it Penn Stai money... YOU can money on ma► things You I'M use throughoni year,lncludi for tgaiNglattifis Via die dub kr a FREE DAC. tokitt what SAM' YOUR ANNUi ony Ulm Pike, jest today. Wag - =ET] 381 Benner together yourself," he said. Realizing the benefits of a near by Wal-Mart is just one of the few adaptations Stone said small busi ness must make. Stone uses the once-typical small town hardware store as an example of how many businesses must adapt to large chain stores. Many hardware stores had branched out into housewares, sporting goods and cleaning supplies, which are all Wal-Mart's strong suit, Stone said. Now, more are specializing in order to compete. "The advantage of the small town hardware store is all the fas teners they carry, in all the sizes you can possibly think of the eight-inch bolt," he said. Wal-Mart does not carry those types of its present mission with an alter ation, such as adding one or two four-year programs, becoming a community college or becoming a four-year college. The plan proposes the Dußois Campus form an alliance with the University of Pittsburgh at Brad ford. And the York Campus, Schuylkill Campus and Mont Alto Campus have the option of collabo rating with Penn State Harrisburg as a multi-campus system, Dunham said. Penn State Harrisburg Student Government Association President Duane Brooks said it is a good idea ment, it became apparent that Uni versity Park would not be able to accommodate all of the students attending the Commonwealth Cam puses. In 1970, the University des ignated Penn State Erie as the only Commonwealth Campus to offer a four-year degree plan and also began to evaluate the mission of each of the Commonwealth Cam puses. The condition of the CES contin ued to undergo evaluation through the presidencies of Bryce Jordan, Joab Thomas and Spanier. During the 1980 s, the system merged with the Division of Con- ROGER A. BIERLY REGISTER OF WILLS AND CLERK OF ORPHANS COURT CENTRE COUNTY OE • AOll • ZOE • AOll • ICE • • AOll • 11 • lAD NESS RE-ELECT Alt, YOU AVINGS ON: ••office supplies & uPilimed • andy & 'mks • beveraga • fresh produce • trues foods • amputee equipment • liame brand elseleunies • lOW= 'jab:iris' Implies • mete tires & butteries COLLEGE CARD Member #595834334 boriitin Diw ,%". " .... ct ... "= . 2:..7 Tz10.=...........-.. things, but employees will tell their customers where to go to find them, he added. "I know a few hardware store owners who want their stores to be as close as possible to the Wal- Mart; they know how to play the game," he said. Jacob Deßooy, associate profes sor of managerial economics at Penn State Harrisburg, said he agrees with Stone. Small business es cannot compete with the behe moths of retail if they sell the same merchandise. "What's got to happen is that these small firms will have to look at themselves and see if they are offering a different product than the larger stores," he said. With the recent addition of another Wal-Mart in the State Col- for Harrisburg to work more close ly with its neighboring campuses. Delaware County Campus Com monwealth Educational Officer Edward Tomersko said Delco received four options to choose from. "I'm not considering any of those the one. I want to give them all fair opportunity," Tomersko said. "(The students) were very pleased. About 40 percent don't transfer to Uni versity Park due to personal rea sons. The president made them feel very good." Collegian Staff Writer Megan Donley contributed to this report. tinuing Education to form what is now the CES. During that time, the state saw a steady decline in the number of high school graduates. Thomas said ongoing discussions concerning the CES were a regular part of his presidency. He conduct ed studies of select Commonwealth Campuses and developed a strate gic plan to address some of the CES problems, such as financial instability, he said. But change was not set into motion. "We had a number of long-range plans but none that were honed down to implementation," Thomas added. Y O * Available at Arboria * DE.31,1195 lege area, local merchants are find ing a greater need to distinguish themselves from their big-chain competitors. O.W. Houts and Son Inc., 129 N. Buckhout St., is a hardware store that tries to set itself apart through service, said General Manager Sam Rogers. Many people, Rogers said, come into the store with a specific prob lem such as a leaky faucet. "We tell you how to repair that faucet and sell you only what you need," he said. Although O.W. Houts has seen its regular customers try the chain stores. Rogers said they often return, saying they missed the ser vice. But, sometimes these competi tion strategies prove to be futile. AT&T chairman shows hope for age of better information By MICHAEL LEACH Collegian Staff Writer The Palmer Chair Lecturer yes terday brought with him a message of hope and anticipation over the coming technologies involving the information superhighway, but stressed the need for responsible drivers to follow —and perhaps fashion the rules of the road to come. Robert E. Allen, Chairman and CEO for AT&T, delivered the annu al James R. and Barbara R. Palmer Chair Lecture in Telecommunica tions Studies yesterday to an audi ence of 100 people in the Carnegie Cinema and 60 colleges, universi ties, and media organizations via satellite. "This is the first Palmer Chair Lecture that is transmitted by satellite around the country," said Terri Brooks, dean of the College of Communications. "It is a sign of how far, how fast things have changed." Allen, who assumed the positions of both CEO and chairman of AT&T in 1988, stressed the impor tance of moving forward in wisdom as well as information in his 45- minute commentary. "I would, in short, ask you to con sider information, not as an end in itself, but as raw material that can 119 E. Beaver Ave. 237-3808 The Daily Collegian Friday, Oct. 20, 199$ - Scott Welham, president of Dank's Department Stores, which closed its location at 148 S. Allen St. in May, said it is not a problem of competition but a lack of cus tomers. More stores have opened in the area while the population has remained fairly steady in the past five years. "Something's going to be squeezed out," he said. However, Welham said he thinks that reports of the death of down town have been greatly exaggerat ed. While cleaning out the down town store, he said he found sortie old newspaper clippings that pre dicted tough times for local bus! ness. "They were having the s[ n „ problems in the '6os when the : , :3 1 tany Mall opened up," he said. be magically transformed human imagination, Allen said. Additionally, the head of AT, - - I a multibillion-dollar empire, not,(: the changes that have taken pl-ic in the development of the Inter - 11cl "When this decade began, ti Internet was still the provin.- t science and goverr ment," !' - said. "Today it's estimated between 30 and 50 million pc .0 access the Internet an ad '1( c network that has come to sy ize the freewheeling, somet, •-, seditious, and always inter:• ti nature of things to come." The things to come are not essarily going to be easy, etir , _: The exciting technologies the markets today carry pitfall- if.. future generations. Allen added that the Internet of t won't necessarily be the info— - tion superhighway of tomorro,-. "The Internet is kind of 1, today," Allen said. "But it ; very efficient, not very roll.)1 and not very secure." Gary Augustson, execu: director of Computer and Info tion Systems, sees bright NI: for both Penn State and AT&T the development of 'met r _ resources. "The partnership between 1 State and AT&T is a strong n Augustson said.