The Collegian Wednesday, November 1, 1989 Pursuit of trivia: Jay Hauser and Marlyn Tomlin were winners of this years Behrend trivial pursuit contest, sponsered by the Intramurals department. Police crackdown by Caryl Mandera Collegian Staff Writer As part of a plan to crack down on parking violations, campus police have ordered a resident student to remove his vehicle from campus property and surrender his parking sticker. - Records indicate the action was taken in response to the student's repeated violation of parking regulations. According to Randy Hoffman, Manager of Police and Safety, the student was cited at least nine times for violations this semester and was referred to the Student Disciplinary Board for further action. Patricia McClellan, the department's secretary, reported similar action is pending in several other cases. "Some students don't pay their own fines," McClellan said. "Tickets are charged to student accounts which are often paid by parents. Revoking the privileges of habitual offenders is our only recourse." The Behrend Bookstore registered complaints against two students to campus police. Records indicate the students ignored notices from the bookstore regarding bad checks. After being notified by campus police, one of the students paid his charge. He has been referred to the Student Disciplinary Board for further action. The second case is still being investigated and action is pending. Officer John Harrington and a Student Auxiliary Officer recovered Halloween decorations stolen from private property on Station Road. According to department files, the officers were patrolling near - the campus . apartments on October 27 and discovered the decorations after ' they were dropped by two persons observed fleeing " from the approaching police cruiser. Police The department turned the decorations over to the Pennsylvania State Police after learning they'd received a report of the theft from a resident of Station Road. McClellan reported the State Police have jurisdiction in on case.. Officers_ on patrol near campus apartments discovered the theft of three no-parking signs and one stop sign on October 27. One of the missing signs was later recovered near the maintenance parking lot. The theft is under investigation, and anyone with information is asked to contact the department at 898- 6101. Officer Todd Allen presented two separate information and awareness talks last week. Allen 1p111111111111•1111111MEMINI111111111111111111• 11111 MOIMINIZIomm ...... misemumeasi I ; 9 I 3512 Buffalo Rd • I wWesleyvillc 899-3423 ITALIAN RESTAURANT Large Cheese & Pepperoni Only $6.99 plus tax Free Delivery with this coupon Expires 11/7/89 Linimummenismunamminmenommuolimmaminommilmmi.minommosui Your Deadline is Our \CHATINIA,MT \ \ \ \ , l L5R e , Deadline CHECK OUR PRICES AND OUR SERVICE TALON BUILDING - ENTER FROM PINE STREET OR PHONE US AT (814) 333-8714 MEADVILLE, PA 16335 eport parking violator Shirts, team jerseys, caps, jackets, other fabric items printed to order. visited Diehl Elementary School on October 24, where he spoke with children about Halloween safety, pedestrian safety and drug prevention. On October 25, Allen spoke at Niagara Hall to students about satanic cults, . on-Octiket 22, campus police were notified of a sick raccoon found along the gorge fire trail. Department logs indicate the animal was shaking violently and growling. The department was unable to obtain assistance from the Regional Game Commission. Wesleyville Police were contacted and assisted in destroying the raccoon. The animal was not submitted for laboratory testing because no human contact had been made. Pizza for ROTC goes rappeling despite the weather On October 21, Behrend ROTC held its Rappelling Leadership Lab. The exercise took place at Twenty Mile Creek in Stateline, Pennsylvania at the Conrail overpass. The site, prepared earlier that day by the Ranger Club, featured a 100 foot freefall rappel lane. Freefall rappellers rappel down a rope in free air. Beginner and intermediate lanes ranging from 20 to 80 feet were also open. During the course of the day James Gleick is making sense out of Chaos (continued from page 1) complexity such as a greatly increased fertility rate. The same concept applied to convection and boiling water shows similar results; a precise order to it until the temperature is hundreds, even thousands of birds increased by such an amount as rise up and move in these predetermined beliefs were synchronization as if somehow overcome, science recognized that predetermined. Once again, it is not only order, but chaos as well, order in chaos. obeys universal laws. Gleick concluded his lecture Some of Gleick's examples by asking the audience to bear in included the rate of population mind that not every idea proposed growth and the boiling of water. by science is correct and that The population increases or science is not intended to explain, decreases at an ordered rate that define, and answer every last can be . defined witha , , . , equatiOn..'Thisequation, hoiveVer, - "The important laws - the can compute chaotic behavior creative laws - lie elsewhere," with the introduction of a said Gleick. Page 3 students were not only instructed in the finer points of rappelling, but were also instructed in camouflage, first aid, movement under fire and land navigation, skills considered important to the infantry soldier for survival in the field. The day ended with a lunch served at 1:30 pm. The lunch consisted of MRE's (Meals, Ready to Eat), hot chicken soup and hot chocolate. to induce chaos. Other illustrations to show order in chaos included the Great Red Spot of Jupiter-"a stable vortex amidst complete chaos"- and the flocking of birds, where