New England's Crate Escape t may not constitute a ma- jor crime wave, but to the A New England dairy indus- try it's the moral equivalent of highway robbery. The crime: theft of milk crates. The chief culprits: college students who use the crates to store books and records. Calling for a crackdown on crate snatchers, dairy lobbyists got a bill intro- duced in the Maine Legislature to stiffen the punishment for milk-crate theft from a $250 fine to $1,000 plus a year in jail. But the lawmakers voted down the bill last spring, rea- soning with state Sen. John Balducci: "It's tough enough to graduate without having to do time for a milk crate." Dairy owners aren't giving up. Bill Bennett, vice president 7 of Oakhurst Dairy in Port- land, Maine, says stolen crates (at $2 apiece) cost his business $60,000 last year. The industry claims to have lost $75 million nationwide because of crate snatching. Some dairymen are retaliating by taking mat- ters into their own hands. Oakhurst ran ads in the stu- dent newspaper at the Uni- versity of Maine in Orono ask- ing students to return their crates. When that tactic failed, the dairy dispatched milkmen to "retrieve" the crates from students carrying goods from their dorms after graduation. In Bennington, Vt., Fair- dale Farms Dairy got even tougher, obtaining a search warrant and raiding a dorm at Johnson State College during Christmas break last year, seiz- ing 428 milk crates. The move was roundly criticized as "over- kill." Maybe the dairy indus- try should simply start opening milk-crate concessions on campuses, instead. KA TE ROBINS in Boston Shy Does Not Equal Lonely When Tulsa psychology professor Warren Jones began studying loneliness 12 years ago, he did something researchers rarely do: he peeked at the names of students who had completed a survey. "I was testing my as- sumptions about who was lonely," Jones explains. "I thought the loneliest would be students I didn't Iz Vyb : d i w Le Realizing a lofty ambition: Student in the New Hampshire sky know." Wrong. The male and female students who ranked as most lonely on his scale were bright, outspoken people who seemed to be popular. Shyness, according to Jones, is a single personality trait. Loneliness, by contrast, is a syndrome involving feel- ings of low self-worth and negativism about life in gen- eral. "All lonely people are shy," Jones says, "but not all shy people are lonely." Forty percent of all young adults, he says, consider themselves in- herently shy. Shy students are usually identified as shy by the people they meet, but they also may seem at first to be unfriendly. In the long run, however, "shy people may be better liked by their friends," AGE Jones says. "They're loy- al, better listeners and less competitive." In Jones's studies of 136 students, 78.6 percent experienced shyness when meeting strangers or approaching author- ity figures. Lonely people, in his view, are harder to spot. They may be liked by others but seldom like themselves. Jones urges sufferers to recog- nize that "virtually ev- eryone" feels lonely at times, whether their schools are big or small. Interior decorating or petty larceny? Student with low-budget bookshelf at the University of Maine Flyin High at Hawt orne nmany small college towns, it seems as if students are always underfoot. But in Antrim, N.H., the students at Hawthorne College are usually overhead-probably doing barrel rolls at 16,000 feet. At this unusual liberal- arts school, more than half of the student body of about 350 major in aviation. Hawthorne authorities say they select their flying majors with an eye to lofty dedication. Says aviation instructor Jeffrey Brown: "We're looking for kids who eat, sleep and breathe flying." Former chancellor William Shea, an avid pilot, launched the program in 1962. "Every- one else was saying, 'Let's start a French class'," Shea recalls. "So I said, 'Let's teach flying!' " Today aviation majors re- quire more than a wing and a prayer: a year's expenses total $15,000 for aviation majors, compared to $6,700 for other students. The college main- tains its own airport and a fleet of 17 smiall planes and two helicopters. By graduation, the aviation majors not only will have taken a standard course load leading to a B.S. de- gree but will have logged about 500 hours of flight time- which gives them one-third of the hours they need to qualify for an entry-level commercial pilot's job. NEWSWEEK ON CAMPUS 23