beatlemania I CAST RETURNS ■ wfk T m V LB ■ B state college ■ I HQ ■ ■ | VENUES Poll: For the second year in a row Penn State received a top rating for LGBT condusive atmosphere By Eddie l au COLLEGIAN STAFF WRlltw Penn State is one of 19 colleges and universities in the nation to receive a five-star rating for les bian, gay, bisexual and transgen- * -•r ’ 7 T & •*,■ .r" t-: p, # * * ■ «* m .# M. Antonio Silas/Collegian Gov. Ed Rendell speaks under a tent on the side of 1-80 about the importance of fixing Pennsylvania’s transportation roads and bridges. Rendell By Paul Osolnick COLLEGIAN STAFF WRITER BELLEFONTE Gov. Ed Rendell stood along Rt. 26 Wednesday and proposed several potential revenue sources that could help the state’s shortage of transportation funding. The press conference is a part of Rendell’s statewide tour to discuss potential solutions to the gap in hinds for repairs to Pennsylvania’s bridges and roadways. Freeze Thaw Cycles settled ifito its new location Bike finds By Nathan Pipenberg COLLEGIAN STAFF WRITER At first glance, the new store doesn’t look'much different than the old one. Skeletons of bikes minus wheels and other essentials hang on racks and wait to become part of a project. A look into the back of the shop reveals the same wrenches surrounding a pair of stands ready to hold the bikes that require some maintenance. A dog’s wagging tail is still the first thing to greet cus tomers through the door. Welcome to Freeze Thaw Cycles. Jordyn Drayton, 27, has seen his shop through three moves from a below-ground Fraser Street location, to a second story shop on Calder Way, to this prime real estate on the 100 block of South Allen Street, finally with no steps leading up or down to the front door. PSU gay-friendly der (LGBT) inclusion and friendli ness. The Campus Pride Climate Index was announced on Monday by Campus Pride, a Charlotte, N.C.-based organization that pro motes an LGBT-friendly learning environment. Five stars is the group’s highest rating. Colleges are ranked from one to five stars, depending on the answers those colleges provide to Campus Pride, according to the , y**' $- #■ * * jjh \ highlights Pa. roadways Rendell is making stops in spe- to close the gap in infrastructure speak on behalf of Exxon-Mobil or cific locations around the state funding. BP or Shell,” Rendell said. where roadways and structurally One idea proposed by the gov- “Anybody that thinks that we’re deficient bridges are in need of emor is to take gas companies out taxing them too high right now repair. of the corporate net income tax and that this is unfair don’t you Rendell stopped in the and have companies like think that people that make the Bellefonte/State College area to Exxon Mobil pay the company biggest profit from a transporta address the need for repairs to net profits tax. tion network should pay a signifi the Route 26 roadway and the Rendell said the amount of cant share of the cost of keeping bridges over 1-80. money going to the state would that network up? I do.” The governor discussed sever- increase from $7O million a year to Rendell said another way to al ways the state could make almost $BOO million annually. gather money to fund infrastruc changes in current taxes and “Now I’m happy to turn the mic ture is raising the cost of licenses transportation-related expenses over to anybody who wants to See RENDELL, Page 2. Steph Wttt/Cotlegian shop niche See BIKE, Page 2. press release. The index looked at university policies, programs and practices concerning LGBT com munity. “I am very exciting about the rating it shows the progress and the wonderful things that Penn State have in place,” said Allison Subasic, Lesbian, Gay, Bisexual, Transgendered and Allies (LGBTA) Student Resource Center director. This is the second year Penn See LGBT, Page 2. UPUA invests Freshman internship showcases job By Zach Geiger COLLEGIAN STAFF WRITER For freshmen interested in student gov ernment but who don’t know where to start, the University Park Undergraduate Associ-ation (UPUA) internship program is a way to get an early start, student body president Christian Ragland said “We want to show them how the executive board and UPUA works and prepare them for a future in UPUA,” Ragland (sen ior-political science) said. The internship spots are only available to freshmen, Ragland said. During the PSU graduates cash in on ‘SLIZ’ idea After inventing a drinking gadget with their friends, a few alumni are hoping to t market their idea nationally. By Megan Rogers COLLEGIAN STAFF WRITER During their time here, some Penn State graduates engineered a way to drink liquor without actually tasting anything—and they say it may become the next social staple for college stu dents across the nation. Their product is the SLIZ Cup a “drinking vessel designed to eliminate the cringe between taking a shot and reaching for the chaser,” said Anthony Vella, one of the product’s cre ators. summer session, he said about 30 to 40 freshmen expressed interest in getting involved in UPUA. But the number of internship positions all depends on the number of applicants during the fall semester, UPUA freshmen outreach executive director Rebecca Alt (sophomore-communication arts and sci ences) said. “It all depends on the pool of appli cants,” Alt said. “We won’t turn people away because we ran out of [executive] board members.” Each intern will be paired with a mem ber of the UPUA executive board, Alt said. If more applicants than executive board members apply for the internship posi tions, the program could be expanded to See INTERN, Page 2. Ragland It’s a cup on top, with a straw for the handle. To get the shot and chaser experi ence, co-creator Maurio Poire, Class of 2010, said users pour the alcohol into the SLIZ cup, add a non-alcoholic bev erage and then drink quickly through the straw before letting the drink mix. The invention quickly became popu lar with their college friends, and soon it may be sold in Urban Outfitters and col lege bookstores, said co-creator Carolyn Rees, Class of 2010. But for the time being, SLIZ cups are only sold online at sllz.com and at some downtown State College stores, like Metro, People’s Nation and Old State Clothing, Vella, Class of 2010, said. Inventing, marketing and selling SLIZ has been quite the experience, Vella said The group got the chance to See SLIZ, Page 2. Other 5-stars Carieton College Ithaca College Oregon State University Princeton University San Diego State University Syracuse University The Ohio State University * University of California Berkeley University of California, Los Angeles University of Oregon University of Pennsylvania University of Vermont * * ■W ~ • J : s ’ ■■ n. in future Bems picks new team UPUA adds group liasions By Casey McDermott COLLEGIAN STAFF WRITER The 11 new student govern ment liaisons didn’t have to sub mit an application or run in an election to be appointed, but the leaders who selected them say the process still produced the best possible people for the jobs. University Park Undergraduate Association (UPUA) Student Life and Diversity Director Michal Bems and President Christian Ragland worked together to place the new liaisons across areas like Greek Affairs, Religious Affairs and Multicultural Affairs. In the interest of speeding up the selection process, Berns (senior-media studies) said she thought it’d be best to forgo an open application. “We needed people immedi ately so we could be able to con tact them over the summer,” she said. “If we opened up the applica tion to everyone, the whole process would have taken a month or two and would have gone on into the [fall] semester.” Ragland (junior-political sci ence) said he did publicize sev eral of the positions Community Services Liaison, Campus Sustainability Liaison, Health Services Liaison and Sports Services Liaison via IWitter, asking interested stu dents to contact him. Otherwise, he said, the selec tion process was essentially a matter of looking for “known faces” in various areas of stu dent life. For example, he said, new Women’s Affairs Liaison Dahiana Tejada (senior-geogra phy and Latin American Studies) is involved in the Commission for Women. Bems said she and Ragland looked for people they knew per sonally when choosing the liaisons. “If I knew them personally already, there’s already a trust built up there,” Bems said. She also said there was no set criteria for the liaisons, but she sought out people who were involved and interested in the field for which they were chosen, and who were able to devote enough time to serving as a bridge of communication between UPUA and their assigned area. When selecting the Greek Affairs Liaison, Bems said she contacted Interfraternity Council (IFC) Executive Vice President Dan Florencio because she is close with him and could trust the person he recommended to her. Florencio said it made sense See UPUA Page 2.