2 I Tuesday, Nov. 9,2010 NEWS in BRIEF Taco Bell to host “Be An Angel” campaign For the seventh year, local Taco Bell restaurants will be participating in the chain’s “Be An Angel” campaign to sup port The Second Mile this holiday season, according to a press release. The Second Mile provides nine prevention, early interven tion, and community-based programs and services free of charge to more than 100,000 Pennsylvania children annually, according to the release. Taco Bell patrons can support the campaign by buying a paper angel available at participating restaurants for a minimum donation of one dollar, according to the release. The angels will be displayed in the restau rants between November 10 and December 22, and all money donated will go toward the “Be An Angel” campaign. Police: $2BO spent on stolen UonCash card Police are looking to identify three men shown in surveil lance photos in connection with a stolen Lion Cash card used at six downtown stores on Oct. 31, the State College Police Department said The man shown using the card is described as white with a beard and a mustache, wearing a dark coat and a dark ball cap turned backward, police said. Another man in the pho tos is seen wearing a plaid shirt over a grey hoodie, and a third man is shown wearing a light-colored hoodie, police said. A student told police he noticed his card went missing dur ing the Oct. 30 Penn State football game, and in the following days about $2BO in purchases appeared on his account, police said. The purchases were made between noon and 4 p.m. on Oct. 31, police said. Police said the card was used at six downtown stores including Got Used Bookstore, 206 E. College Ave., The Apple Tree, 136 E. College Ave., Pita Pit, 218 E. Calder Way and Lion and Cub Clothing, 226 E. College Ave. Police: Two thefts from cars reported Two thefts from cars were reported within the span of an hour Sunday afternoon, the State College Police Department said. Police said the first theft was reported at about 12:30 p.m., with a FM transmitter and a car radio faceplate stolen from a vehicle parked at 200 Highland Alley. At about 1 p.m., another faceplate and a Garmin GPS navigator were stolen from a car parked at 301 S. Atherton St., police said. Police did not say whether the vehicles were secured when the items were stolen, and an investigation is ongoing. Police: Student finds car egged, scratched A student who parked her car in Lot Orange G at 10 a.m. Monday said she returned two hours later to find her car covered in broken eggs, Penn State Police said. Eggs were broken on the car’s rear passenger side, the driver’s side mirror and doors, and shells were found inside the lining of the driver’s door window, police said. The student left to wash her car at noon that day and returned to park it in the same lot, but returned to her car at about 4 p.m. to find scratches she hadn’t noticed before on the car’s hood, rear panel and passenger side door, police said. The value of the damage is estimated at about $5OO, police said. Ticket on sale for Bon Jovf Tickets for the Bon Jovi concert at the Bryce Jordan Center will go on sale at 10 a.m. Friday. Tickets cost $19.50, $29.50, $49.50, $79.50 and $129. They can be purchased at the Bryce Jordan Center, Eisenhower Auditorium, Penn State Theatre Downtown and Ticketmaster.com. The concert will be held on Feb. 9 at the BJC. Police: Student’s suitcase stolen on bus A student returning to State College on a Rillington Bus from King of Prussia said his suitcase containing a laptop and contents valued at $1,540 was stolen, Penn State Police said. The student told police the suitcase had been placed in the bus’s luggage storage area before the bus departed King of Prussia, but was missing when the bus arrived at Findlay Commons at 3:40 p.m. Monday, police said. Family: Soldier from Pa. killed in Afghanistan SCRANTON Relatives of a soldier from eastern Pennsylvania say he has been killed in Afghanistan. Family members say 33-year-old Dale Kridlo of Pittston died early Sunday. His grandmother, Alberta Kridlo, says Army officials told the family that he was shot and died from his wounds. Military authorities said Monday they could not immediately confirm the death. Follow us on Twitter for up-to-the-moment news, www.twitter.com/daiiycolieglan ✓ W The Daily Collegian Collegian Inc. James Building, 123 S. Burrowes St., State College, PA 16801-3882 The Daily Collegian Online, which can be found at www.psucolleglan.coin, is updat ed daily with the information published in the print edition. 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On the World Wide Web Board of Editors Board of Managers Kelsey Thompson Chase Vickery .Toth DePinto, Hank Sherwood .Alissa Nemzer .Sara Chroman, Ben Gasbarre Stephanie Haas Anna Chau ..—....Danielle Meyers Jamie Leder LOCAL & STATE Weather: SJss 'ZT Jail guards charged over inmate’s injuries PITTSBURGH Two county jail guards were arrested on charges that one beat an inmate while the other kept a lookout and then denied the assault in her offi cial report and subsequent inter view with authorities. Allegheny County jail guards Arii Metz, 32, and Marcia Williams, 38, were arrested and arraigned early Monday. They are free on bond pending a preliminary hearing Nov. 16. Both have been corrections offi cers for 10 years. They’re suspend ed without pay late last month, along with a third guard who was allegedly present during the beat ing but has not been charged. The inmate, David Kipp, suffered a broken nose, a badly bruised face and a perforated ear drum, police said. Metz and Williams were charged in county court, but Special Agent in Charge Michael Rodriguez, who heads the FBl’s Pittsburgh field office, said prosecutors were also looking into whether federal civil rights charges would be filed. “We’re obligated to those law enforcement officers that work in the jail that do serve honorably and do execute, perform their duties within the law” to prosecute those who don’t, Rodriguez said at a news conference Monday. Kipp, 24, was allegedly assaulted Icon From Page 1. songwriters not just of his era, but of all time,” Aquila said. “Before his arrival on the music scene, rock song lyrics generally were about love and written in simple rhymes. Dylan injected the entire pop music scene with a folk sensibility influencing everyone, including rock artists like the Beatles, the Beach Boys, Bruce Springsteen and Marvin Gaye.” Dylan has performed at the BJC before, but that doesn’t seem to have made officials at the venue less excited. Bernie Punt, BJC director of sales and marketing, said the arena is being set up in an intimate way for Dylan’s performance. “This is quintessential rock his tory coming into our building,” Punt said. “We’re making it unique and different from other concerts.” nr n President Ron Filippelli asked said. “We respectfully would like to Sahakian if he wished to comment withdraw our request and leave on the issue. the property the way it is.” From Page 1. Approaching the lectern to address Filipelli officially concluded the downtown would help solve the the members of council, Sahakian rezoning efforts and adjusted his problem. Just before the council said he understood his rezoning glasses to read the next bullet was about to decide whether or not request caused more controversy point on the agenda, moving past to send the request back to the than he intended. the controversial item one last planning commission to further “We understand the request to time, deliberate the request, State rezone the property from R 2 to College Borough Council CID has divided the council,” he To e-mail reporter: arms373@psu.edu Football From Page 1 must include an increase of at least $5 on the previous bid, Petulla wrote. GoPSUsports.com has been auc tioning game balls and other game used equipment for the past sever al years, Petulla wrote. The auction is a way that fans can own a “slice” of the unforget table Penn State moments, Associate Athletic Director for Marketing Greg Myford said. This game-used ball is particu larly special because of the signifi cance of the game, he said. “Owning a piece of college foot ball history is an understatement psucollegian.com Marcellus From Page 1 ty before have been criticized. Some of MCOR’s findings have disagreed with former studies con ducted by Penn State. A report co conducted by former Penn State professor Robert Watson stated that the gas released from the Marcellus Shale could power the country for 100 years. Last month, Watson confirmed that he stood by that number. MCOR’s more conservative esti- Alumnus From Page 1. “From a producer’s standpoint it’s an easy way to [raise money], but it’s not a very professional way of doing it,” Broscoe (senior-film and video) said. Despite financial issues, White said he is just happy to be working in a field he’s always wanted to be a part of. “It’s a big role. Being the actual editor for a documentary, not too shabby for this point in my life,” White said. And while the actual documen- By Joe Mandak ASSOCIATED PRESS by the guards after his arrest Oct. 13 on charges that he stabbed his live-in companion during an argu ment. His defense attorney, Kevin Abramovitz, called the guards’ actions “egregious” and “disgust ing” but said Kipp won’t be com menting because of his criminal charges. “Whatever reason a person’s in a jail cell they should certainly be protected from themselves, from other inmates, and certainly from the staff,” Abramovitz said. Jonathan Stewart, another Pittsburgh attorney, is represent ing Kipp civilly and said it’s “highly likely” Kipp will sue claiming a civil rights violation, even if the feds don’t bring such a criminal charge. Allegheny County police Superintendent Charles Moffatt said the beating allegedly occurred in the jail’s intake area after Kipp yelled at guards, but stressed that nothing justified the beating. “There was some verbal give and take. I didn’t say there was any provocation,” Moffatt said. According to the criminal com plaints, the jail’s medical staff alerted internal affairs officers that Kipp was being treated for facial injuries allegedly inflicted by a guard. Kipp told investigators he had a “physical confrontation with offi cers” during processing before Metz and corrections Officer Timothy Miller put him in a deten Dylan will also play at a number of universities including Clemson University, the University of Akron and the University of Florida. “[Dylan] has had an affinity for performing at colleges ever since he started touring back in the ’6os,” Punt said. “He’s still one of the hardest working people in show business to this day.” Zak Sobel (senior-Spanish) said Dylan is the pinnacle of musical talent and originality. “I feel that he is one of the great est songwriters of all time,” said Sobel, a member of the Penn State Songwriters Club. “He is who every songwriter strives to be.” While Sobel said he has tremen dous respect for Dylan, he said he never tries to imitate the tunes that made Dylan a musical icon. “I never cover his music because I don’t think that it can be cov ered,” Sobel said. “He is truly unique, and every cover of one of his songs that I’ve heard has paled “Owning a piece of college football history is an understatement in this case.” in this case,” Myford said. Game balls are auctioned from and watched as he won national each home game and a few away championships. Tecce said he games, she wrote. wouldn’t be surprised to see the Some of the proceeds from the bidding reach as high as $lO,OOO game ball and equipment auctions but the game itself was priceless, go to the Football Letterman's “No one was really sure when it Club Scholarship FUnd, she added, was going to happen, especially a Paternoville Vice President John couple of weeks ago, but to have Tecce (junior-marketing) said the electric feeling from Michigan alumni will pay upwards of millions and carry it into this week,” he to own a piece of history. said. “It was an incredible feeling.” Alumni have a special connec- tion to Paterno, he said, because To e-mail reporter: mers2oo@psu.edu “It is an industrial activiy. But as a society, we’ve gotten accustomed to the comforts this land of activity creates.” is “20 Yoxtheimer said. Though Yoxtheimer used to con- we’ve gotten accustomed to the suit for gas companies, he said that comforts this kind of activity cre the negatives of the process are ates.” clear, at one point comparing a drill site to the aftermath of a Penn To e-mail reporter: ndpso4s6psu.edu tary has extreme viewpoints, White said they haven’t affected him. Croshaw said his ultimate goal for viewers is for them to become Christians. “I want viewers to give this film to one of their secular or liberal friends and listen to Dennis, and just say ‘Do you want to know why I’m a conservative, why I voted for Ronald Reagan? Here’s this,’ ” Croshaw said. White said he worried he would be judged for working on the film. “I don’t want to be labeled as some right-winged bigot,” White said. The Daily Collegian tion cell while Williams stood in the doorway, the complaints said. Kipp claimed Metz punched him up to 20 times in the head and face and only stopped when Kipp began bleed ing, the complaint said. None of the jail’s daylight shift sergeants reported any confronta tions with Kipp, nor did the three guards questioned by internal affairs investigators, the complaint said. But surveillance video showed Metz and Miller entering Kipp’s cell while Williams stood in the cell door looking around. Forty seconds later, surveillance video showed all three officers leaving the cell, the complaints said. Moffatt wouldn’t say why Miller wasn’t charged, but the complaints suggest he is cooperating with investigators. Miller told police he saw Metz hit Kipp 10 to 15 times. Williams, however, made “no mention of a physical confrontation in her written report,” the criminal complaints said. Mike Manko, a spokesman for District Attorney Stephen Zappala Jr., said county and federal prose cutors must determine whether the case will eventually be prose cuted under state or federal law. The U.S. attorney’s office declined to comment on the possibility of federal charges. Calls to Metz’ home phone were not answered and Williams didn’t return a message left on a phone listed at her home address. in comparison to his original ver sion.” Many well-known artists includ ing Jimi Hendrix, U 2 and Dave Matthews Band have covered Dylan’s hit, “All Along the Watchtower” among others. Sobel said he encourages any student with an interest in music to attend the show. “This concert is significant because Bob Dylan is one of the all time greats,” he said. “If Bob Dylan comes to your town and you don’t see him, there should be a really good reason as to why you’re not going.” Dylan has influenced every artist today, either directly or indi rectly, Sobel said. “Even if they don’t listen to Bob Dylan, the musicians that they lis ten to have definitely been influ enced in some way by him,” he said. “A piece of Bob Dylan is in every song that is written.” Greg Myford Associate Athletic Director for Marketing they have seen him in his prime Dave Yoxthelmer Marcellus Centre for Outreach and Research liaison State tailgate. “It is an industrial years, activity,” he said. “But as a society, “But I think our film is unique in that it doesn’t really portray us as that.” White said working on the film has made him think about a lot of different subjects, but it hasn’t sig nificantly changed his views. “When you’re listening to the same thing over and over again because you’re editing over and over, it just becomes background noise,” White said. “It’s work. It doesn’t really affect how I’m feeling about the movie, or how I’m feeling about the political or religious cli mate.” To email reporter: lmlSolB9psu.edu
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers