FRIDAY, APRIL 3, 1970 Minors Granted Medical Ri dill Eliminates Consent By .ANN ROSENBERG Collegian Staff Writer A bill granting certain minors, at least 18 years of age or older, the right to obtain any medical, dental or health services without the consent of their parents, goes into effect today. The bill, passed•by the Pennsylvania General Assembly; last January, states that "any minor. who is 18 years of age, or has graduated from high school, or has married or has been preg nant" may give .his own consent for personal" medical care. It also allows medical services to be rendered to a minor of any age "when, in the physibian's judgment, an attempt to"secure consent would result in the delay in treatment which would increase the risk to the minor's life or health." Birth Control Dispensary? According to Dr. John A. Hargleroad, direc tor of health services, the passage of this bill does not mean that the Ritenour Health Center will become a birth control dispensary for the residence halls. Hargleroad said'the relationship between the doctor and patient at Ritenour always has been. one of a confidential nature. "I have no in tention of telling the doctors how to practice medicine," Hargleroad added. The bill is most beneficial to University physicians in emergency cases. For example, if a student needs an immediate operation, he is referred to a local, not a University, surgeon who. in most cases, a ould not operate without parental consent. If the parents were away or divorced or had moved and the student refused to give pertinent information necessary to Teamsters Close To Agreement; Thousands Continue. Truck Strike WASHINGTON (AP) "The secretary is quite op- Teamsters and trucking timistic that a lot of Progress negotiators were repo r t e d has been made," a spokesman yesterday to be close to a for Secretary of Labor George three-year wage - agreement for P. Shultz said. 425.000 truck drivers, and some However, many of th e striking workers already were thousands of striking driver in returning to their jobs. dozens of cities remained off Boy Discovers Dead Girl Near Pittsburgh Supermarket PITTSBURGH (AP) The nude body of a 17-year-old high school girl was found yesterday in a vacant lot behind a supermarket in the Homewood section of the city. Police said she was wearing only a wrist-watch and black boo:=. The girl was identified as Eileen W. Taylor, a student at Sacred Heart High School. Miss Taylor's parents had reported her missing some seven hours before a 9-year-old boy discovered the body while looking for his lost clog. She was last seen leaving a party about 11:30 p.m. Wednesday. police said. The exact cause of death was not immediately determin ed, but police said the girl had suffered head injuries. locate his parents, no medical treatment could be administered. As for contraceptive advice, Hargieroad said, it always has been available to stu dents. Certain doctors may not have felt comfortable in discussing: this with. certain patients, he said, but the student always was free to, discuss his. or her problems with another doctor. Each doctor is free to prescribe contracep tive devices ~ as he sees fit, Hargleroad said. The type of contraceptive to be given, if any, would depend, on the student's needs and medical history. " In the,past,. doctors may have prescribed the pill for a ,coed under the guise that she was having problems with her menstrual period, when in fact, such a diagnosis would have been difficult to substantiate, Hargleroad said. Un der the ndw bill, the doctor now may prescribe the pill if 'he feels it is warranted simply because a coed does not want to run the risk of interrupting her college education with an un wanted pregnancy, he added. Doctor-Patient Confidences The confidences between the patient and the doctor are not violated simply because the stu dent is under age. The only time that a stu dent's parents would be notified about their child's condition, without the student's per mission, would be when the patient has a con tagious disease that constitutes a health hazard for other University residents, Hargleroad said. "If a pregnant coed came to us, we would urge her to seek treatment but we could not force her to do so. We would not violate her trust and notify her parents, unless she wanted r ulbri • ght: N. us to help her 'break the ice.' This might be a r crisis in her life, but this sort of thing happens every day at Ritenour," he said. Acceptable the job while the national con tract talks continued i n 'Teamsters Union headquarters here. Sources said bargaining teams headed by the acting Teamsters president, Frank E. Fitzsimmons, and chief in dustry' negotiator Ray F. Beagle had narrowed their earlier 80-cent iap in wage positions to a. difference of aboin 30 cents. And they were continuing efforts to co m promise. The: talks reportedly cen tpred in the area of about 51.25 an hour wage increase over three years, plus improved mileage pay, pensions, health and welfare benefits, vacations and cost-of-living pay. The . strikers returning to work reportedly did so on the assurance that Ikhatever final agreement is reached will be retroactive to Tuesday mid night then the old contract ex pired. THE DAILY COLLEGIAN, UNIVERSITY PARK, PENNSYLVANIA All For 24; 24 For All i . WOMEN OF SIMMONS, led by Gail Levy (6th-physical education-Philadelphia). last night campaigned for 24-hour visitation rights for their residence hall. They can sleep peacefully now, as Simmons approved 24-hour visitation last night. WASHINGTON (AP) Sen. J. W. Fulbright, D-Ark., said yesterday the United States should be willing to accept control of Indochina by a North Vietnam strong enough to resist Chinese domination but too small to pose a threat to the rest of Southeast Asia. Opening a new series of Senate speeches on what he con siders the myths that afflict U.S. foreign policy, the chairman of the Senate Foreign Relations Committee said it makes little difference to the United States and to the area's inhabitants who rules Vietnam, Laos and Cambodia. "The plain fact that comes out of the war in Viet nam reinforced by recent events in Laos and perhaps Cam bodia as well—is that, puny as it is by great power standards, North Vietnam is the paramount power in Indochina. "We ought to welcome North Vietnanis pre-eminence in Indochina," Fulbright said, "because while North Vietnam has shown itself strong enough to dominate Indochina, if left alone by outside powers, it also has shown itself willing and able to resist Chinese domination. "At the•same time," he added, "North Vietnam is far too small a power to have any serious hope of conquering all of Southeast Asia, much less of posing any kind of a threat to the United States." Fulbright emphasized "I do not advocate a Communist dominated Indochina. . • Unwelcome but Tolerable • "I merely propose to accept it, it it arises from the local power situation, as something unwelcome but tolerable, and most emphatically not worth the extravagant costs of a war like the one we are now fighting!" he added. The Arkansas Democrat said. "From the standpoint of American security, the, central fact about Indochina is that it does not matter very much who rules in those small and backward lands. "What it all comes down to is that, if all other things were equal—as indeed they are not—it might be a convenience to the United States to have the countries of Indochina ruled by non-Communist leaders," he said. Fulbright said "North Vietnam, though materially depen dent and politically influenced by both Moscow and Peking, is an authentically independent country." —Collegian Photo by Roger Greenawalt Vietnam Power Foil to Peking Resist Domination Founder of Dußois Campus Receives Penn State Medal CaFoline NI. Dußois, a woman who gave her family home for, 'the founding of the University's Dußois Campus was presented today with a Penn State Medal in recognition of her many contributions to higher education. •The presentation was made by University President Eric A. Walker during a luncheon ceremony at the Dußois Country Club. "We are proud to present this medal to Caroline Dußois," Walker said. "Her service to the young people of this community has been untiring and her dedication to the sup port and expansion of higher education in Pennsylvania unswerving." The Penn State Medal was established by the University Board of Trustees in 1957 to "recognize and honor achietTments of pc . ons who perform continued and dedicated service toward the betterment of higher education in Pennsylvania." Miss Dußois, who resides near the campus, played an instrumental role 35 years aco in the location of a Penn State Center in the com munity named for her family. In 1938 she and her sister, Sarah D, Cravey, donated the family mansion and four acres of To Hel Center Plans Furniture Fair The Penns Valley Outreach Center will sponsor a Furniture Fair April 18. The Fair will enable low income families from the Millheim area 'o purchase second hand furnishings at minimal prices. The project was announced at the March meeting of the Centro , County Community Ac tion Board of Directors Tuesday evening at the courthouse in Bellefonte. 'The Millheim Outreach Center is one of four such centers established by the Office of Economic Opportunity in Centre County. The other three are in Bellefonte, Howard and Port 7 p.m., Tues., April 7 land to the University to serve as a permanent campus offering education opportunities to the young people, primarily from Clearfield, Elk and Jefferson counties. .IVliss Dußois is a charter member of the Dußois Educational Foundation, the campus advisory board, and has served as its vice president since its incorporation in 1945. "Caroline Dußois has been a strong force behind the growth of Penn State in this com munity and its acceptance and support by the citizens of this region," Donald S. Hiller, direc tor of the campus, commented. "She has con tributed generously of her time and her resources to the continued development of this campus and we here are genuinely and deeply grateful." The award of the Medal preceded ceremonies at the campus when Walker presented a replica of the Penn State Nittany Lion Shrine to the Dußois student body. Allan Robb of Dußois. a sophomore in draft ing and design technology and president of the campus student government, accepted the cub from Walker. The i eplica of the Penn State mascot nn as modeled under the supervision of Heinz \Var neke, the sculptor of the Nittany Lion statue located on the University Park campus. Low Income Families Matilda Accord= to Marion K. Stocker. assis tant professor of Human Development. "These buildings are established as places where peo ple \those incomes are substandard can buy good clothing at surplus prices and attend classes in such areas as home economics." A large group of University students is ex peeled to go to the Buchanan Barn April 11. They will paint and refurbish the furniture tha already has been donated for the sale. Furniture donations now are being solicite. and contributions will be collected if donors cal the center at 349-5550. WING ON DOWN to The Daily Collegian CANDIDATE SCHOOL 265 Willard 'i__ . ~~ ,'~'r PAGE FIVE