Tuesday, Oct. 21, 2003 LEAVES ARE A BLOWN’ • Leaf removal has begun on and off campus. See page 4 for full story. Senior class By Jessica Golden COLLEGIAN STAFF WRITER | jmg43l@psu.edu Starting today, seniors will begin the process of leaving a class gift to mark their time at University Park campus. Voting to determine the gift begins at 8 a.m. online today and will continue through Friday at 5 p.m. with the win ning gift announced a week from today. The Senior Class Gift Ballot Selection Committee chose three proposals for this year’s ballot, including replacing deteriorating benches donated by the Class of 1900. The benches are found in the area of the Pattee and Henderson Malls. A second choice is to fund the improvement of Willard Plaza in coordi nation with the current Pollock Road reconstruction. The plaza would include outdoor seating, brick paving, plantings, and bicycle parking Or, seniors may choose to create an obelisk garden in the northeast corner of the Hintz Family Alumni Center gar dens. The area will be turned into an open lawn with seating along the perimeter. Students can go to the Web site for additional information about the gifts and to see pictures of the proposals. Amber Krieg, senior class gift advi- Inside The Daily Collegian CDs offer special features Bands have started to add bonus material to their discs to help those people who are willing to spend their money on the music get the most out of it | ARTS & ENTERTAINMENT, Page 7. ‘Under God’ debate silent A national controversy sparked by the recitation of the Pledge of Alle giance in classrooms has not yet worked its way through State College public schools. | LOCAL, Page 4. Council discusses infill issue State College Borough Council con ducted a hearing last night in order to get input from residents before voting on the elimination of infill in the Urban Village. | LOCAL, Page 2. Muhammad to represent self Sniper suspect John Allen Muham mad won the right to serve as his own lawyer in a surprise request at his murder trial yesterday. He faces the death penalty. | NATIONAL, Page 5. Inside todav: Spam clogging your e-mail? SCIENCE UNO HEAIIH THE DAIUtikOLLEGIAN. gift voting begins today sor, said the choices were narrowed down from more than 40 proposals sub mitted from students, faculty, alumni and members of the Office of Physical Plant (OPP). “We wanted three choices that would generate excitement for students but would be feasible for the amount of money we have,” Krieg said. “Also, that it would go with the tradition of Penn State.” Janet Moccia, the advertising and public relations chair for the commit tee, said having members of OPP as a part of the decision-making process was vital to discover if the proposal could be completed in a reasonable time frame within its budget. Moccia estimates raising $lOO,OOO from the senior class, and OPP expects to be able to complete the project TABLE OF CONTENTS Arts. 7 Horoscope 14 Briefs 2 Opinions 6 Calendar 3 Scoreboard 9 Classifieds 14 Sports 8-11 Crossword CONTACT US Newsroom: 865-1828 Ads/Business: 865-2531 ON THE WEB www.colleglan.psu.edu ©2003 Collegian Inc. When and where to go to cast a ballot ■ Online: from 8 a.m. today until 5 p.m. Friday at www.seniorclassglft.psu.edu. ■ Today: 10 a.m. to 3:30 p.m., HUB-Robeson Center and Allen Street Gates. ■ Wednesday: 10 a.m. to 3:30 p.m. at the HUB and the Student Book store, 330 E. College Ave. ■ Thursday: 10 a.m. to 3:30 p.m. at the HUB and the Student Book Store, ■ Friday: 10 a.m. to 3:30 p.m. at the HUB and Student Book Store. l5 The Scene. l4 Weather.. Published Independently by students at Penn State from start to finish in two years. The theme of this year’s senior class gift is “Honoring Tradition, Leaving a Legacy,” and all the three choices fit into this idea, Krieg said. The ballot selection committee was made up of about 15 members includ ing the sue members of the overall sen ior class gift committee, senior stu dents, faculty members and OPE Scott Upright, a senior student cho sen to be on the committee, said while it was hard narrowing down to three options, he believes the committee did a good job. To vote, students need to have sev enth-semester standing. Students in their fourth year may not necessarily meet this qualification. Voting will take place online at See VOTING, Page 2. Cho uses political comedy to send message By Meghan Gaffney COLLEGIAN STAFF WRITER | meg226@psu.edu Margaret Cho, the second speaker in this season’s Distinguished Speaker Series, “rocked the house” in Eisen hower Auditorium last night just as she promised she would. “I feel kinda weird,” said Cho to the sold out crowd of 2,500 people. “I’m sup posed to be a distinguished speaker? Wow. What do I do?” Cho was at Penn State last night as part of her tour; CHO Revolution. Her work is known for its political founda tion, and she did not stray from her bit ing political comedy last night “I am staying away from California,” she shouted to the crowd. “We already had a governor! No take-backs!” Cho said Schwarzenegger referred to Hitler while campaigning, which should have kept him from winning the position. “The one person you cannot give a shout-out to is Hitler,” she said. “You cannot say that Hitler is a homie. Maybe Mussolini, maybe.” Cho said voters were misinformed, which is why people voted for Johnson to face alcohol chaiges By Nicole Charsar and Robert Spruck COLLEGIAN STAFF WRITERS nmcls2@psu.edu, rjs336@psu.edu Penn State football player Tony Johnson was arrested early Friday morning for driving under the influ ence. Johnson, 21, faces one count of driv ing under the influence of alcohol or controlled sub stance, two counts of driving on roadways laned for traffic and one count of obedience to traffic control devices. Johnson is the starting wide receiver for the Nittany Lions. He is the brother of for mer Heisman Trophy candi date Larry Johnson Jr. and son of Larry Johnson Sr., Penn State defensive line coach. A preliminary hearing date is set for Nov. 26. The following occurred according to police reports: The charges stem from a 3:03 a.m. Friday incident in which Penn State Police Services Officer Brian Rose observed a black Mercedes Benz trav eling north on Bigler Road in front of his patrol vehicle. The car is registered to his father, Larry Johnson Sr. . The Mercedes turned right onto Park Avenue and, while traveling west bound, both driver’s side tires crossed Spanier addresses filesharing program By Kristen Neufeld and Daniel Bal COLLEGIAN STAFF WRITERS kmnl33@psu.edu, drb226@psu.edu Penn State President Graham Spanier spoke about the university’s efforts to adopt a new file-sharing pro gram, among other concerns, at last night’s Undergraduate Student Gov ernment Academic Assembly meeting. Currentfy co-chair of the Joint Com mittee of the Higher Education and Entertainment Communities, Spanier said the university hopes to have a free file-sharing service available to all stu dents by next fall semester. “We want to get a system in place before our students get in trouble,” he said. “It’s going to get pretty serious if we don’t deal with it.” The program will allow students on and off-campus to access approximate ly 500,000 of the most frequently down loaded songs at no additional fee, Spanier said. “I have a good feeling about this falling into place,” he said. “What we end up with could be quite wonderful if we pull it off.” However, Council of Commonwealth Student Governments academic affairs director Kyle Templin said the program will only offer streaming access, not ownership, of files. “The services are just ‘tethered’ downloading,” he said. “It can transfer Margaret Cho shares laughs with a crowd of 2,500 in Eisenhower Auditorium. Schwarzenegger at all “People are so stupid and voted for him because they actually think he is a robot from the future.” Cho received the greatest reaction when she turned her comedy towards Bush. Vol. 104 No. 64 over the center yellow line on two occasions. Rose initiated a traffic stop, approached the vehicle and identified Johnson by his Pennsylvania driver’s license. He said he detected the strong odor of alcohol throughout the car. A series of standardized field sobri ety tests were given to Johnson, all of which he failed. Rose placed Johnson under arrest for driving under the influence of alco hol and transported him to Centre Community Hospital Johnson was informed about the implied consent rule. The rule states that when a person signs for a driver’s license, the person is also giving consent to give breath, blood or urine sam- Johnson pies if picked up for a DUI, Penn State Police Services Supervisor Bill Moerschbacher said. A blood test was performed at the hospital, and it was later determined that Johnson’s blood alcohol concen tration was 0.136 percent, which is more than the state’s 0.08 legal limit Jeff Nelson, Penn State sports infor mation director, said Johnson would not be made available for comment yesterday. He added that head football coach Joe Patemo would not comment until today. Several phone calls to Larry John son Sr. went unretumed yesterday. Graham Spanier and D. Josh Troxell discuss file sharing. to an MP3 player on your computer, but can’t be burnt onto a CD.” John Ten Hoeve, representative for the College of Earth and Mineral Sci ences, said quality is sacrificed with streaming. “Students won’t be happy and the recording industry won’t care as much,” he said. “The whole system [Spanier] is proposing is going to have a lot of bugs.” “If we were gonna have a recall elec tion, why don’t we recall the presiden tial election?” she shouted above roar ing laughter and applause. Cho’s ultimate message was that everyone should unite against inequali ties. “We should have a million minority march,” she said. “That would indude everybody.” Cho criticized the government’s action to ban same-sex marriages under the premise that “marriage is sacred.” She said the government should look at marriage before they make such a statement “Carmen Electra and Dennis Rod man got married,” Cho said. “Michael Jackson and Lisa Marie Presley. Liza Minelli and David Gest—now that is my idea of marriage.” She took on a more serious tone as she reminded the audience members to “de-colonize” their minds. Cho spoke about how 1,049 federal rights are denied when lesbian, gay, bisexual and transgender (LGBT) people are not recognized as married couples. “This can mean so many things, from See CHO, Page 2. IC off campus See SPANIER, Page 2.