colle lbe g Dail l y TOU SEA Team disapixf:l „ , psucollegian.co Published independently by students at Penn State @ dailycollegian INDECENT EXPOSURE Police charge man Link to past cases unknown By Casey McDermott COLLEGIAN STAFF WRITER Charges were filed Nov. 24 against a Penn State student in connection with the most recent case of indecent exposure, Penn State Police said but police are still investigating whether the student is linked to the 13 other cases reported since last August. At about 4:30 a.m. on Nov. 18, Zachary R. Kleinman, of Morganville, N.J., was seen mas turbating inside a television lounge in Geary Hall by another student serving as an auxiliary police officer, police said. Unlike the man described in other incidents, Kleinman was not wearing a mask when he exposed himself, police said. Kleinman is charged with one count each of indecent exposure, open lewdness and disorderly conduct in connection with the incident, police said. Other on-campus indecent exposure incidents have been reported in Brumbaugh Hall, Hiester Hall, Holmes Hall, Schulze Hall and Tener Hall since August 2009. In those incidents, police said the man involved was generally described as a college-aged, light-skinned male with dark hair At this point, this is the only indecent exposure to which Kleinman has been linked. Police said they are unable to confirm whether Kleinman was involved in any of the other inde cent exposure incidents on or off campus. Penn State Police Deputy Director Tyrone Parham said police have yet to name anyone involved in the other indecent exposures. Police cannot rule out. with complete certainty, the possibili ty of a connection to the most recent incident, Parham said. "We haven't identified anyone specific with those other cases yet," Parham said. "So who can say 100 percent that this guy is not that person? It's not fair to say that this guy is definitely not him." The incident involving Kleinman came just two weeks after two other on-campus inde cent exposure incidents were reported. The first of those cases occurred at about 3:05 a.m. on Nov. 1 at the Food Science Building, police said. The second occured at about 11:23 p.m. on Nov. 4 in side Patterson Building, police said. Off campus, a masked man has also been involved in several indecent exposure cases since June 2010, the State College Police Department said. Three cases involving a masked man exposing himself have been reported in Nittany Garden Apartments, 445 Waupelani Dr., and one in Imperial Towers Apartments, 425 Waupelani Dr., police said. Because several of the See EXPOSURE. Page 2. Jason Cohen brews authentic Chinese tea at the Tea House. Derek Moye (6) makes a catch during the Nittany Lion's iuss to Michigan State Saturday afternoon lions 'too little, too late' By Andrew J. Cassavell COLLEGIAN STAFF WRITER There are plenty of areas to place blame for Penn State's 28- 22 loss to Michigan State on Saturday. It could have been the eight penalties for 67 yards. It could have been the secondary break downs, freeing Michigan State wide receiver B.J. Cunningham for two touchdowns. It could have been the offense's inability to move the ball until the Spartans had already taken an 18-point lead late in the second half. But for senior running back Blue Band seniors reflect on careers After their last game, Blue Band members look back on memories By Matt Scorzafave COLLEGIAN STAFF WRITER With 304 members, the Penn State Blue Band is a key compo nent of the greatest show in col lege football. But for the Blue Band seniors, that show came to an end Saturday afternoon during the final home game of the season. While the band finished anoth er season in Beaver Stadium last Saturday, members are confident the band's legacy will live on with out them. "They'll definitely keep pulling Tea House offers authentic Chinese flavor By Julie Mastrine COLLEGIAN STAFF WRITER Students no longer have to study abroad to get authentic Chinese tea. The Traditional Chinese Tea Ceremony (GongFb Cha) Club held the grand opening of its Tea House earlier this month. The Tea House, located in 34 Ritenour Building, is open from 12:15 to 2:30 p.m. on Mondays, Wednesdays and Fridays, club founder Jason Cohen said. The Tea House serves 14 differ ent flavors of whole-leaf tea, which Evan Royster, the clock simply reached zero a bit too soon. "We ran out of •time," said Royster, one of 18 players hon ored on Senior Day before a Beaver Stadium with a student section about two-thirds full. - We had the momentum. We were doing things right. It was just too little too late." For the first three quarters. however, the Nittanv weren't doing much right. and Michigan State capitalized. The Spartans' victory was their first at Beaver Stadium since Penn State joined the Big Ten, and it locked up a share of the Big Ten it off," Sharon Silverman (senioi Jewish studies) said. Silverman. a co-captain of the Blue Band Silks, said her four years with the Blue Band were both memorable and rewarding. "I am going to miss the sense of family that I've gotten." she said. "Being a part of something that makes this university one of the greatest in the nation is unforget table." Members said this season has gone really well the future looks bright for the Blue Band. Mark Grant, a trumpet player, said he was excited to be a part of a band that garners so much sup port and respect. think we have a lot of pres tige. Our director actually just told us that this has been one of See BLUE BAND. Page 2. are imported from Chinese tea masters, people who specialize in brewing tea. Students trained in the traditional Chinese GongFb Cha-style brewing ceremony brew the tea. The Tea House offers tea that is very different from the kind typi cally found at a coffee shop. said Patrick Penny, director of Tea. House operations. "The tea you would generally get in a coffee shop, or any type of teabag tea, is pretty much what they sweep off the floor in tea fac tories," Penny (freshman-division of undergraduate studies) said. Ko'e. , ‘.ng Ccilerian title and an 11-1 record. Penn State fell to 7-5 with the loss, capping a regular season full of disappointment in opportu nities to make a national state ment With the loss, a trip to the Gator bowl on Jan. 1 against an SEC opponent appears most like ly Following, hot starts in each of Ins three starts at quarterback. Matt McGloin struggled in the first half tiaturda throwing for Just !ill yards on 9-for-19 passing. See FOOTBALL. Page 2. To redo aHDlit 104 student turnout at the game LOCAL. Page 3. The Blue Band performs at their last 2010 home game on Saturday "At the Tea House, you're not get ting tea in a cardboard or plastic cup. We're approved brewers per forming a tea ceremony for you." Cohen (sophomore-political sci ence, anthropology and econom ics) stressed the high quality of the tea served at the Tea House. - This is higher quality tea than is probably available almost any where in the United States," he said. "There are only a few people importing the same quality tea as we are, and none of them are in Pennsylvania." The Tea House offered free tea for two days during International Slurs, taunts mar game Police look into incidents By Casey McDermott COLLEGIAN STAFF WRITER For some spectators in Beaver Stadium at the Oct. 30 Penn State football game, sports rivalry escalated to the point of verbal and physical aggression and one month later. Penn State Police said they're investi gating whether two separate incidents in the stands warrant legal action. One incident involved a University of Michigan fan who was the target of physical and verbal assault while seated in the student section at the game versus the Michigan Wolverines, police said. In this incident. a Michigan fan --- dressed in a banana cos tume at the game -- was verbal ly and physically assaulted by those seated around him in sec tions SA and SB, police said. No one involved in the alterca tion was severely injured, but several people were seen by Penn State Emergency Medical Services and were released, police said. The fight involved multiple people. but police said the per son thought to be mainly respon sible is described as an Asian man with short black hair. wear ing a white shirt at the time of the incident. A student who was also assaulted during the incident and tried to help the Michigan fan reported the incident to an officer during the game. police said. But this happened later in the game, police said, not imme diately following the incident. Across the stadium, another incident during the game has also elicited an investigation by police after a pair of Michigan fans were physically and verbal ly harassed by other spectators to the point that they opted to leave the game early. they said. See TAUNTS, Page 2. Education Week, Nov. 15 through the 19, according to the University Office of Global Programs' web site. Normally, the tea sells any where from $2 to $4, Penny said. The Gong Fla Cha ceremony per formed by the club is different than Japanese or Korean method ology, Cohen said. "There's a concentration on fla vors. Everything makes a differ ence, from the quality of the tea to what water you use," Cohen said. "It's an art form." Cohen said he started the tea club after studying tea in China. See TEA, Page 2.