Affecting Mercyhurst Students Inconsistencies Found In General Telephone Policy By Fran Moavero and Donna J. dent had made it known to the ed that day, the student spoke (Phone Mart) should be $50.00". Peterson General Telephone employee with another employee who According to Jackson, the Either after six months or on $50.00 security deposit was in- the last phone bill, the amount of v The mandatory General that she is a Mercyhurst College quoted the price of $25.00 security deposit apiece for the two room- stituted for college students security deposit and six percent Telephone policy requiring a student residing in a college interest is credited to the phone $50.00 per roommate security dormitory. mates. The student informed the because of a number of problems employee that they were from out caused by students with phone bill. deposit for telephone service has The student was asked if she A number of Mercyhurst been found inconsistent in its would be making any long of town and had no previous service. distance calls and she said she phone service in their names. College students often receive students, however, claim that m%- treatment of Mercyhurst college billings with pages of long their final statements only • k* students! "-^ would not. The student was also Another Mercyhurst student asked by the employee whether who lives in an apartment re- distance calls, said Jackson. She reflected the security deposit and . • ;_v The Merciad has determined added that several people may not the compiled interest. $&• that various Mercyhurst students or not she had ever had phone quested phone service at the Phone Mart . A security deposit use one student's phone for long Jackson said that the collective *ji§r who have requested phone ser- service in her name before. The deposits are invested and earn &«& vice through the Phone Mart at student informed the employee of $60.00 for one student was distance calls and when the bill is quoted an employee. sent, the student does not know six percent interest. Egg the Millcreek Mall were quoted she had not. ~y According to Jackson, three -_£ )§§£ and charged prices inconsistent Another Mercyhurst junior was Mrs. Jackson stated that who made the calls. Consequent- '&& with the $50.00 policy. 1 %• only required to place a $35.00 security deposits for college ly, said Jackson, the phone com- criteria must be met in order for '•• fcig According to 5 the General security deposit by the Phone students are sometimes less pany is often left with unpaid a student to possibly not pay a __ jtojfc; Telephone Company, all Mart. This student was not asked because the students live in an bills. security deposit. C* Sgi customers besides college if there would be any long off-campus apartments and do Some students also leave "As long as the student did f-t WB students must pay a minimum of distance calls or where her not reveal that they are college school and go home without pay- have service before, excellent " B S $35.00 for a security deposit This hometown was. The student was students. ->i' ing their bills, said Jackson. The credit, and lived alone, we might ;"* jgga. deposit must be paid in advance asked if there had been any Jackson then said that the $50.00 deposit is designed t o offset waive the deposit," said Jackson, y f I before installation. ^ W.2- previous phone service in her Phone Mart makes the deter- these unpaid bills, according to .A Mercyhurst senior who • mination for students' security Jackson. t- previously had phone service in /"« ^ Mrs. Jackson of the General name before and the student her name last year and excellent '-* Telephone Company Business Of- stated no. §. f§3 * 4^. deposits based upon "personal "None of us like it when a col- fice said there should be no dif- contact". lege student calls in," added credit and lived alone was re- S Bom students were to be the on- Jackson. v^r. quired to pay a $50.00 security & ference between the General ly students using the phones. £ "Every individual is dif- Telephone policy and the deposits ferent," said Jackson about dif- After: six * months, security deposit this year. f- ';' A Mercyhurst junior who . fering security deposits. '• deposits are returned to students At this point the Merciad has charged by the Phone Mart. | resides in an apartment spoke to not researched the possibility ^ "The Phone Mart is General a Phone Mart employee before When asked by the Merciad her with six percent interest. opinion of the fact that some Kay Jankowski, another that the inconsistencies in deposit '* Telephone," stated Jackson. \ the store had opened for business charges for college students ex- _ A Mercyhurst junior who hours. The employee quoted the students are charged $50.00 employee of the General deposits while others are charged Telephone Business Office, ex- tend to other college campuses. - sought phone service through the student a security deposit charge plained the security deposit re- The discrepencies do, however, •-* Phone Mart was not required to of $50.00 per roommate. j nothing. Jackson replied, "It's v pay a security deposit The stu- After the Phone Mart had open- not fair." She added, "The mall fund procedure. • Vi»exist at Mercyhurst. '• • fflerxiao etftpufiltcatiim
VOU54 NO. 6 MERCYHURST COLLEGE, ERIE, PA. OCTOBER 16.1981 Typing Clinic Started AtMSG In Flecken Room Check Cashing Service To Begin; The Flecken room will be used tative schedule will include two as a typing clinic for communica- or three hours a day, four or five Hurst In Process Of Buying! S e s l e r tion majors, said Richard Gar- days a week. - * da, director of the communica- & Work study student and Com- The ^Mercyhurst student ing a phone at all times while the during the tenth week, a com- tions department. '#•* | munications major Jim Kopchuk government voted to institute the service is operational. muter representative, and an all The Flecken room, commonly will be in charge of the clinic shuttle bus and check cashing A motion was then made to ac- resident representative'election known as the library blue room, when it opens. ••? & services proposed at last week's cept the proposal as submitted was voted on. A motion dealing is located on the west side of the meeting. , g under operation dates. There was with these elections was passed ground level.g* \ &g^ , The purpose of the shuttle ser- an all in favor response, 'i with only two abstentions. Garcia hopes to accommodate vice is to provide low cost y The check cashing proposal Next oh the agenda was the the typing needs of communica- Visitation transportation to and from the was then discussed! The opera- trustee update. It was stated that tion majors by having a facility Erie international Airport- and tion times would bef Monday, Mercyhurst College is in the pro- open especially for them. "The Erie Greyhound Bus terminal. Wednesday and Friday - 1:30 to cess of controlling and purchas- typing clinic will be for the ex- Hours The service will be operating 3:30. On Wednesday it would be ing Sesler Apartment Building. clusive use of ^communication on these dates: November 23,24, open 7 p.m. to 8 p.m. The SAC report was given next. majors and minors at this time," Revamped 29, and 30; December 11 and 12; The cost would be $2.00 en- There Jwill be an Ice Cream stated Garcia^ He also plans to January 8 and 4; March 10,11,21, trance service fee (paid only Social, October 15, at 8 p.m. - in someday have the typing c l i n i c During the last school year, a and 22; May 27 and 28. i once) and $.25 service charge per the back porch cafe. There is no open for all students to use. decision was made to shorten the The service can operate either check. A motion was then make admission fee, however students The typewriters for use in the number of hours available to on schedules which coincide with to activate this proposal as soon must pay for the ice cream they clinic will j come from the visitors in the residence halls. major outgoing | and incoming as possible. There was an all in eat. ^*dl5L business department Garcia is This year, individual dorms met flights and buses or on an on-caD favor response. | The next MSG meeting will "trying to get rid of the big old to determine whether or not to basis. T I Wl The election committee update have a time change. Instead of electric typewriters which have move the .morning restriction yl( an on-call schedule was in- was then given. Discussion over Tuesday at 2 p.m., it will be Tues- been cast upon the communica- " from one p.m. to noon. ~f!p *stituted , * it 'would mean-there freshman elections taking place day at 3 p.m. tions department." The reason As a result* two of the three would have to be someone mann- for* this, he said, was because dormitories, Baldwin and there aren't enough ^electric McAuley, have ^visitation hours outlets. ^?»'*»a|] beginning at noon and lasting un- He stated further that the elec- til midnight on Sunday through Old Main Wo Be*Re- Wired tric typewriters are old which Thursday, and one a.m. Friday The $1,000,000 project to re- Because circuits are too few, and floor is at stake. causes keys to stick, takes time to and Saturday! Only* Egan wire Old Main, Preston Hall, and incessantly overloaded, the col- The college itself is providing warm up, and replacement parts residents have maintained the Egan Hall was initiated last Fri- lege has found itself "being nickl- $50,000 for the project, and the are obsolete. •? | ;:* one p.m. restriction in 2the day, October 9,1981, stated John ed and dimed to death with minor Sisters of Mercy have committed Garcia is trying to trade in "the afternoon. *?' ^J Nesbit, assistant to the president repairs. Not only that," he added, the other $50,000. "The entire re- old workhorses" for the easy to government affairs. £ | "but lurking in the background is wiring will take about 18 mon- According to Mercyhurst Stu- the safety hazard." * ths," said Nesbit. operate manual typewriters dent Government President Rich "The deferre1 d maintenance which - could - be used in ^ the Lanzillo, the hours were changed can't •wait,* ' said Nesbit.'The fcNesbit explained that if the xs In order for parts of the project Flecken room* much* more as a result of students' com- building was constructed at a building were to burn, down, it to be completed "the building will readily. J Vj**. plaints of visitors at late hours, time when extensive wiring would be impossible to replace. have to be virtually shut down." The Communications Depart- information about the new inter- wasn't necessary* for electric Also the safety of the dormitory he said. However, the areas most ment hopes to.have the clinic visitation hours will be posted in typewriters, Xerox machines, Students living in Egan Hall and in need of correction will be taken open by the end of October. A ten- all the dormitories. and audio-visual equipment." the Sisters of Mercy on the third care of immediately. r - iSbitoriate OCTOBER 16,1981 PAGE 2 Letter Forewarned E you hvu) wfak -';; uUtti. M fa* Presided r Marquee toytihtr in one pk&\ fk&jai\ buus 'left is | mm I >. landrys old futfc Postings Forearmed s A c The inconsistencies found in Questi the General Telephone policy of ivlfMm determining security deposits for Dear Editor, ?r-= • 4 college students must be We would like to make a com- recognized as a blatant display of ment concerning the marquee arbitrary decision-making by a outside of Zurn. As you well knoWi supposedly .fair iand |un- this past Iweekend was the discriminatory monopoly. jjgj homecoming for our alumni, and Charging one person without the marquee was an information previous service no j security center for many. P^S §1 deposit, while someone with nine While the events were being months phone service and good posted on Friday afternoon, the credit a $50.00 deposit is obvious- girl who was taking care of i t was ly unfair. $&j approached by one*of our Granted the $50.00 college stu- players. She was asked if-the dent deposit is widespread on this women's tennis match was being campus, but the exceptions posted. The response was no, should not exist. The random because of the "welcome Alum- charges of zero, $25.00, $35.00, ni" that was to be put up. We $50.00 and $60.00 should not be were all satisfied with this, but allowed.| somehow it seemed unlikely that When one makes £ a rule, there wouldn't be space for a especially a monopoly like campus event that concerned General £ Telephone, that rule students as well as alumni.? • ? should not be broken. If that rule Later that day we walked by is to be broken, specific stipula- the marquee only to find the Sun- tions for exception should be Guest Editorial day night movie posted. Granted, stated in writing rather than the this is important, but tennis was use of the whimsical "personal happening on Saturday afternoon contact" system s fej $£ Sadat: A Man Of Peace and the movie appears on Sunday This flimsy ^policy makes night. For such an %important General ^Telephone look like a By Mike Fitzgerald following decade was! almost together for 13 days until a peace weekend as homecoming, flexible small business where extraordinary. | J v> settlement? w a s finally worked couldn't someone have changed anything goes, rather J,than a j While many of us'aU Mer- In 1972, he expelled over 18,000 out. Carter aides at the time talk- the marquee on Saturday after large responsible utility which cyhurst were worrying about Russian military personnel from ed of the considerable patience of the match had been held, .and services an entire " county| of such important things last week Egypt. This was the first of many Sadat and how hard he worked therr pur up ine Sunday night customers. *f as a test grade or the score of the moves ^that * w e r e considered for a setttemenfErJjft, i|?.. movie? This way no events would s The policy of charging $50.00 latest Steeler game, one of the "impossible." But, thanks to an assassin's be slighted. * «4N|| ^j per college student who requests greatest peace seekers of our In 1977, he astounded the world bullet, Sadat is dead now. There We sincerely hope that in The phone service is groundedjhe time was taken away i r u r n us.. by traveling to Israel to coat^n, uch jiuubL j.jufrft, MhcUk^t luj». future ail even Lb will be given reasons for Instituting such a President* Anwar Sadat of peace talks'with Menachem goals for peace wfll*ever be equal space accordingly. ^5 policy are valid. There probably Egypt was a man of peace in Begin." This mover*was un- realized. Men like Ayatollah Kho- Sincerely Yours, | j | **• •• are a number of students who do every sense of the word. In the precedented in the Middle East meini of Iran and Muammur Sharon Chiappazzr^!^^^.^ try to evade their last bill by nW. Arab countries where turmoil and he changed the complexion of Qaddafi of Libya, who thrive on Dawn Goodwill |gk „ conspicuously leaving town, un-. and hatred seem to reign Egypt-Israel relations as he pro- hatred, were glad to see Sadat Terrie Thompson ^-' paid phone bill behind. «*** supreme, Sadat often stood alone claimed to the Israelis, "You die. $*< There is, however, no reason as a man in search of peace and would like to live with us in this The peacemakers of the world, j Kathy O'Connor .lHB£v region of the world, and I tell you DeniseMall '' for General Telephone's unsound settlement with Israel. s however, were dealt a crushing Peggy Collar ira and inconsistent policy; Sadat took over Egypt from in all honesty that we welcome blow. Great men like Anwar One may also question the Abdel Nasser in 1970. At the time, you among us." i ^ J Sadat do not come along too often veracity of General Telephone's no one expected much from Sadat and Begin met again at in our world. Heaven should be claim that the collective security "Nasser's right-hand .man." Camp David along with Jimmy proud of Anwar Sadat The world Sttj* iStarcfan deposits are invested earning on- won't be the same without him. ly six percent interest. A Mer- What Sadat accomplished in the Carter in 1978 M The men met a utuient publication cyhurst administrator, when told of this statement, discerned that MERCYHURST COLLEGE the interest rate is probably no VOL 54 NO. 6 OCTOBER 16,1981 less than ten percent or as high as 17 percent realistically. This %? Editor-in-Chief assumption is a great deal more Rebecca L. Martin believable than The six percent Assistant To The Editor claim made- by the phone /'• Donna I Peterson company. ^ .J Feature Editor Now that the campus is aware Bonnie James * of the serious disparity, students Sports Editor/ should do something with the &A»vU
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Drop your guard for a ,," but not necessarily 3 * ? minute. Even though you're '. assigned to active duty. Find
in college right now, there out about it. ..•>*.-> .' "".K are many aspects of the Army that you might find very ; A BONUS FOR attractive. .j^iBB _.,_ _ PART-TIME WORK :. Maybe even irresistible, t $&&$&£& * You can get a $1,500 ••"'* See for yourself. ., iJ^SfEfegSSi^; bonus just for enlisting in some Army Reserve ^ units. Or up to $4,000 in educational benefits. J. v ADVANCED NURSING « • URSE. | HEP SCHOOL. O H US ggji You also get paid for your Reserve duty. It '\V You read it right. TUITION-FREE: &j|| comes out to about $1,100 a year for one weekend The Army's Health Professions Scholarship You get tuition, pay and living allowances. a month and two weeks annual training. * %g Program provides necessary tuition, books, lab You can also take Nurse Practitioner courses And now we have a special program to help fees, even microscope rental during medical and courses in many clinical specialities. All on you fit the Army Reserve around your school school. the Army. jk * ijja J^ Jt d^j^&j schedule. « it iL Plus a monthly stipend that works out to _J While these programs do not cost you any g|ijl Its worth a ltx>k. ^EJ^^i^i about $6,000 a year. I bjDngy^josj|oi them do incur an additional! senMC^oniiganon school, you can be accepted into our program^ *. A SECOND CHANCE AT COLLEGE Then you're commissioned and you go A CHAHCE TO PRACTICE LAW £ Some may find college to be the right place through school as a Second Lieutenant in the at the wrong time for a variety of reasons The Army Reserve. If you're about to get your law degree and be admitted to the bar. you should consider a Army can help them. too. £ The hitch? Very simple. After you graduate, commission in the Judge Advocate General A few years in the Army can help them get you give the Army a year as a doctor for every Corps Because in the Army you get to practice money for tuition and the maturity to use it year the Army gave you as a med student, with i law right from the start. wisely. a minimum obligation of three years' service. While your classmates are still doing other The Army has a program in which money I : IHTERHSHIR RESIDENCY lawyers' research and other lawyers' briefs, you saved for college is matched two-for-one by the I could have your own cases, your own clients. government. Then, if one qualifies, a generous & CASH BONUSES j in effect, your own practice. bonus is added to that, t Besides scholarships to medical school, the Plus you'll have the pay. prestige and privi- So 2 years of service can get you up to JJ Army also offers AMA-approved first-year . leges of being an Officer in the United States $15,200 for college. 3 and 4 years up to $20,100. post-graduate and residency training programs. Army. With a chance to travel and make the IIn addition, bonuses up to $5,000 are available Such training adds no further obligation to most of what you've worked so hard to for 4-year enlistments in selected skills. 3 | the scholarship participant. But any Civilian become. A real, practicing lawyer. Bean Army Add in the experience and maturity gained, Graduate Medical Education sponsored by the Lawyer. '• and the Army can send an individual back to . M I Army gives you a one-year obligation for college a richer person in more ways than one. •t every year of sponsorship, with a minimum f ROTC SCHOLARSHIPS We hope these Army opportunities have • i i obligation of two years' service. Though you're too late for a 4-year intrigued you as well as surprised you. Because But you get a $9,000 annual bonus every scholarship, there are 3-. 2-. and even l -year there is indeed a lot the Army can offer a bright ) year you're paying back medical school or post- 4 • scholarships available. 4 *j& person like you. X t graduate training. They include tuition, books, and lab fees. For more information, send the coupon. pr So you not only get your medical education Plus S100 a month living allowance. Naturally paid for, you get extra pay while you're paying they're very competitive. Because 4 it back. Not a bad deal. * besides helping you towards your Please tell me more a b o u t . D j AM) Medical School and Army Medicine. degree, an ROTC scholarship helps • ; A GREAT PLACE TO BE A NURSE you towards the gold bars of an • IAN) the Army Nurse Corps, DI AD Army Law. *| The rich tradition of Army Nursing is one • DlFR) ROTC Scholarships. D(SS) Army Reserve Bonuses, Army Officer. • I PC I Army Education Benefits. % ?££$' of excellence, dedication, even heroism. And Stop by the ROTC office on its a challenge to live up to. A campus and ask about details. *. Today, an Army Nurse is the epitome of \AMfc professionalism, regarded as a critical member of the Army Medical Team. £ I UP TO $170 A MONTH AlUWfcS* 4 A ESN degree is required. And the clinical You can combine service in the d ttTY spectrum is almost impossible to match in Army Reserve or National Guard STATfc m * civilian practice. €: with Army ROTC and get between And, since you'll be an Army Officer, you'll I Va: $7,000 and $14,000 while you're «K'HOOI ATTtMMNCi P-UrOI HIRTH enjoy more respect and authority than most of still in school. > Send to: ARMY OPPORTUNITIES, P.O. BOX WO your civilian counterparts. You'll also enjoy It's called the Simultaneous NORTH HOLLYWOOD. CALIF. 91605 travel opportunities, officer's pay and officer's Membership Program. You get $100 privileges, .*; -j 'i < a month as an Advanced Army ROTC BE ALL YOU C A N Army Nursing offers educational oppor- Cadet and an additional $70 a month
tunities that are second to none. As an Army (sergeants pay) as an Army Reservist. I ARMY, i 1 Nurse, you could be selected for graduate degree When you graduate, you'll be Note To insure receipt o! information requested, all Monks must he completed -tfr- programs at civilian universities.' • * commissioned as a Second Lieutenant. • - . . J** *?C$SQQ | f TENNIS CLUB What's a Christian • x t| Every Tuesday | To Do? £ i Speaker: (Ham Lou Kownackl, 7:30 - 9:00 p.m.| : f\ LIBRARY O.S.8. : Mass Schedule ; Student Union Thurs.. Nov. 5.2:30^ HOURS \ (Contact Dr. Williams 301 2 if p.m., Campus ministry Saturday 7 p.m. Rm. 200 Main (As oi 10-8-81) "-^interested but can not attend.) Lourjgel^yr •>»• •-• - Sunday 11 a.m.f: Chapel | | K Mon. -Thurs.. M,T,Th,F 4:30 p.m. Campus Ministry 8:30 a.m. to 11:00 p.m. Rm. 211 Main Friday ^CONTEST * 8:30 a.m. to 4:30 p . m . JgThe* S t u d e n t Activities Committee is Saturday looking for a theme for the Winter Formal, Reconciliation (Confession) Wed February 1982. A pair of tickets { f o r the 5:30 - 6:30 p.m., 200 Preston 9:00 a.mjto 4:30 p.m. formal will go to the person whose theme Sunday." is selected. Entries must be turned in by 2:00 p.m.-11:00 p.m. October 26th to Stephanie Weidman, Box Spiritual Direction by arrangement w •-» . -*. .v.... - j, .: -> ; «* *m WJ^!A J!aaLJan Gatti. TH^.M^gf^Tr ^tmrte OCTOBER 16,1981 PAGE 7 then plays the following two Booters Roll Wednesdays at home against Big The Mercyhurst soccer squad 5 foes Edinboro and Gannon. improved its record to 6-2-2 last Crew Opens Season From week by tying Geneva 2-2 and NCAA Division II beating Pitt-Johnstown 5-4. Standings for the week of Oct. 16th. J Against Geneva the Lakers fell 1 Dayton 6 0 0 (58pts. The Laker navy will engage in the crew in a decade, will be spor- The quickly behind as Geneva slid 2 Widens 500(57 pts. its first action of full exhibition ting a heavyweight varsity eight, two goals in to grab the early 3 Baldwin-Wallace 5 0 0 (51 pts season as they take on a rugged a lightweight varsity eight, and a 4 Montcair £ 5 0 0 (48ptl West Virginia University squad freshman eight. lead. The 'Hurst fought back as 5 Lawrence . "- 5 0 0 (40 pts.) this Sunday at a regatta schedul- "The focus of our fall season is Beanstalk Dave Cross rifled a snot past the 5 Wabash ': 5 0 0 (40 pts.) ed to begin at 1 p.m. on Presque mainly on teaching technique and By J. Bean e r SSS Geneva keeper to begin the com 7 flfredgjrc 5 0 0 (36 pts.) Isle Bay. developing a solid base for en- eback. After a few minutes the 8 San Diego 'J3 5 0 0 (34 pts.) durance," he commented, noting Lakers were awarded a penalty 9 Elmhurst £? 4 0 0 (30 pts.) Coach Al Belovarac, boasting Once again the football team 4 0 0 (19 p i t of one of the largest turnouts for that the real serious racing does continues to make believers out shot but failed to capitalize on the 10 West Georgia not occur until the spring. Even of non-believers. J Most people, opportunity and the scoreire- so, he felt his crews are ready for myself included, thought that mained at 2-1 Geneva.* , ? Jf ; a sterling performance. Our they would fall to the division 1 g Finally in the waning minutes In Homecoming Spectacular • ^i; ; lightweights and freshmen have school Glenville State. Once of play Ed Masharka's 7th goal of been moving particularly well," again we were wrong as the the season dead locked the score he observed, with the freshmen 'Hurst rolled to a 14-7 victory, ad- at 2-2 and sent the game into Lakers Whip Pioneers 14-7 in particular showing a tremen- ding to. the spectacle of overtime. Neither team was able dous competitive spirit. Our Homecoming weekend. * to score in the overtime period The lfired-up "Mercyhurst 15 when they were forced to punt. and the Lakers were handed their Lakers took advantage of two Laker Dave Curtis blockea the heavyweights also have an ex- The game reminded me of the blocked punts Saturday to beat kick as the-ball rolled out of plosive potential if they can old Minnesota i Viking teams second tie of the season.Sj the Glenville State Pioneers 14-7 bounds at the 13. Six plays later harness their technique oyer the whose defense produced the big Against Pitt-Johnstown the distance." - 3 *C ~t* plays to win games. It seem as if Lakers won a hard fought victory in front of an enthusiastic John Moore carried it in to pull homecoming crowd. £ v/ \ the Lakers within one. The extra The Women's Crew have also every year the Vikings would over the physical n Johnstown been preparing for the fall season lead the league in blocked kicks. team 5-4. Both d< fenses had trou- The two teams were scoreless point play was no good, so the ble in the early going as both the. in the first half but the Pioneers score stayed 7-6. ? and will match strokes with Well, following Bud Grant's ex- registered the first p o i n t s as they The Pioneers received the WVU's oarswomen. Losing only ample Tony DeMeo's boys block- Bobcats and the Lakers scored two women to graduation last ed two punts to produce the upset twice within the \ first? five marched all the way downfield kickoff but failed to move t h e ball minutes. $£*. | ~ with the second half kickoff. The on the stingy Mercyhurst year, coach Jack Beck expects and raise the squad's record to 1 score came with less than three defense. On fourth down and his varisty to mount a serious 3-1-1. Congratulations guys, it * Each team changed goalies challenge to the Mountaineers. was an impressive victory. after this and the game settled minutes elapsed in the second long, Mike Hanes blocked the down somewhat until (Ed half when Steve Gandy took a Pioneer punt, but this time Jon ' 'We've got the size this year to g o -&t Masharka hit the twine for the Jeff Metheny pass for a Gerade of the Lakers fell on the a long way," he noted, "as well as Well, it's that time of the year 'Hurst to give the Lakers the touchdown and a 7-0 Pioneer ball in the end zone for a Laker superb technique." The women's again when the minds of lead. From there the Lakers lead.^ W. \ are touchdown. John Moore added mentor also noted his novices Americans turn to the fall scoredv twice more, one a Mercyhurst battled back and the two point conversion for Mer- have been rapidly improving and classic, the World Series. In the beautiful left foot* shot from 35 put together an incredible cyhurst and a 14-7 final score should make a strong showing. I National League the Montreal resulted. g i *£g|£i The races may be viewed from Expos and Los Angeles Dodgers yards out by Dave Cross. 98-yard drive late in the third Pitt-Johnstown put two goals quarter. Unfortunately, the drive The Lakers ran their record to the Laker boathouse at the foot of each captered their divisional did not result in a touchdown for Sommerheim Drive.. In case of play-offs while the New York past substitute keeper Jamie an impressive 3-1-1 as the divi- rough bay conditions, the races Yankees and Oakland A's trium- Borowicz to make the final 5-4 the Lakers as Craig Zonna came sion-one Pioneers saw their Lakers. * 2 +_^ ^^ up short on fourth and one. i| record drop to 1-3. * JL ^£ *. will be viewed on Findley Lake, phed in the American League. ^Forced to operate deep in their which can be reached by taking ^Mfc Thi3 sets up divisional ser^e^f fcJEd Masharka wa,s the offensivi e ItfH orcy h u r s t • playaEa Rain Oc- Exit 9 off 1-90 and following Rt. ^illinium"Nil 4lie*lmkeTS ««"he territory* the Pioneers could only,. 430 East tor 12 miles; ^djjjti New York vs. Oakland. scored four goals (the second manage to get the ball out to the tober 24 at Waynesburg. M In the National League I think time this season he has.ac- the Expos pitching staff and complished this feat) to bring his speed are too much for the aged total to 11 for the season. cj TAKE A TIME OUT... - Dodgers and the Expos will Defensively it was Borowicz as triumph 3 to 2. * je j he held the Bobcats to two goals ? The American League is a lot in the last 85 minutes of play, harder to pick but I've got a gut lowering his career average to feeling that Billy Ball will prevail 2.12 goals per game. and the A's will dump the Yanks The 'Hurst takes the field in 5. 3 to 2._ _ Wednesday against $ Grove City MISTER HOAGIE Home of FreshlBaked Pizza Freshly MadelHoagies Delivery System1 With $10M Combined Order At: 7:0019:00,11:00 p.m. FWfSH BAKED Stop by after the game! • * •4319 Peach Street in Erie Please call 30 minutes (HMUMIIAK •2170 East Lake Road in Erie HOAGilf prior to delivery. •909 Peninsula Drive in Erie • 2650 West 26th Street in Erie Show Mercyhurst ID DfUCKttJS • 1311 Broad Street in Erie g and Save 20% HOAOICS • 1115 Sassafras in Erie •4316 Buffalo Road in Erie 33rd and Pine ^S *5N,WT McDonald's .•Imperial Pt. Plaza, Girard 459-4104 \ $*m Covin, Ownw/Opmrttor r1*M fV'*n**'*"**•»- '.- A*s*A*- j-" feT * *%?t t**v THBMEReiAD iW" • —T" !Z w& ^-^ #- m+- ,^ p/. I I ) f^C i V1!! lS ©he U t e r i s i Vii* * * a fituient pub If c a t u m VOL-54 NO. 6 MERCYHURST COLLEGE, ERIE, PA. OCTOBER 16,1981 INSIDl E: ll, N General Telephone Deposit •/>; v; Discrepancy Story Pg. 1, Thursday Night October 15 Editorial Pg. 2 ( Abilene"®:30i 1:30 Biking In 'tvJw%-Z'^fl'i No Cover Charge Thursday Night Holland ••• Pg. 3 Friday and j S a t u r d ay Alexander v| Godunov To Easy" Appear i •••••••. . Pg- 4 9:30 to 1:30 'Hurst f EpM Happenings?... Pg. 6 Friday and Saturday Oct • o | § 22 and 23 | Sports Pg? Easy" ^fSS^ WeB theme forParen, s 38th And Pine •oS^Sffi?"*"' " •• ' ttSte tiiiimiiii I I I I I I I I I nimiiii i nit 11 n i ittn >«---«:»