The daily collegian. (University Park, Pa.) 1940-current, September 13, 1973, Image 5

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    Entertainment promising
By REGINA ANDRIOLO
Collegian Staff Writer
"Whaddya wanna do
now?"
"I dunno. Whaddya
wanna. do?"
There should not be-too
many excuses for this type
of conversation the next
few months at Penn State.
University entertainment
programs for Fall Term
promise to be large and
varied, ranging from
original rock musicals to
philharmonic concerts.
The University Concert
Committee opened its fall
program Sunday night in
Rec Hall with a concert by
the New Riders of the
Purple Sage. UCC officials
have high hopes of getting
Roberta Flack to perfrom
Homecoming night,
September 29, and the
Edgar Winter group to
appear on All-University
Day, October 27. The
committee is still in the
process of getting the
performing contracts
signed.
The Artists Series will
get its season underway
this weekend by presenting
the Broadway hit musical
"Godspell" in Schwab..
Other fall programs
include The National
Ballet, September 22; tenor
Seth McCoy, September 28;
"Two Gentlemen of
Verona," a rock adaptation
by the composer of "Hair,"
October 13; Samuel
Beckett's "Krapp's Last
Tape" and "Not 1,"
October 20 and 21; pianist
Alicia De Larrocha,
October 26; and the
Leningrad Philharmonic
Shapp admi
privately o
HARRISBURG (AP) —The supported . the general
Shapp administration recommendations, of a
yesterday proposed the retail Philadelphia accounting
state liquor monopoly be firm's study. Reece provided
turned over to private newsmen with a summary of
enterprise. the study, . which was not
released. AcCording to the
Although administration report, the state could realize
officials hinted they favored the current $l5O million in
the move, there was no annual liquor revenues under
formal announcement until private enterprise while
gubernatorial assistant permitting price reductions of
Norval Reece called a news up to five per. cent.
conference.
_ .
This could be accomplished
Reece said Gov. Shapp by the commonwealth's
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• ; •
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ALICE IN _WONDERLAND •
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• CHARLOTTE HENRY
• W. C. FIELDS
CARY GRANT
: GARY COOPER
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Orchestra, November 1
On they folk and jazz
scene, ,country music
lovers should be happy to
hear the Folklore Society is
bringing ; singer_ John
Jackson back to Penn
State. Jackson appeared at
last May's Folk Festival.
The Jazz Club hopes to
have either Grover
Washington or Keith
Jarrett here to perform the
first weekend in October
and is
JOHN
engage
slapsticl
play "I
play 01
Artists
nistration proposes
liquor stores
ned
Jack Harper
Versatile
Turtle Necks
real Irish coton
rib knit ready for
any occasion:
White, red, natural,
cream, pumpkin, navy
and other colors
, •
•••••••••••••• 00000 •••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••
iiiiiii
other concerts later in the
term.
The Penn State
Th . espian.s are
experimenting this term
and presenting an original,
rock ' musical by Eric
Diamond (10th-music)
entitled "The Brother-
Hood." Performance dates
are November 1, 2 and 3 in
Schwab.
The 5 O'clock Theatre,
which deals in original
ital theater ill
holding on to its wholesale The report recommended
operation. The retailers, in that Pennsylvania sell .its
other words, would buy their retail stores at public auction
liquor_ supplies from the state.. and franchise rights. Sales
" would be expected to provide
The key to maintaining $lOO million to $3OO million.
current revenues would be A second license would be
increased sales through issued to each successful
merchandising techniques bidder , as an added
and by stopping inducement. This would
Pennsylvanians from buying double the current 750 retail
liquor in neighboring states. outlets.
Next time PSU screws you,
why not have some friends
who care?
9p
FRATE
RUSH
KERN GRADUATE BUILDING
•
FRIDAY SEPT. 14 •
•
•
SATURDAY SEPT. 15 •
8 8. 10 p.m. ONLY 50` •
•
be . presenting in the
Pavilion "My Legs Are On
Fife; I Can iSmell the
Smoke," October 3, 4 and 5,
and "Silverstein and Co."
NoVeniber 7, 8 and 9.
University , Theatre
productions for this term
include "The Amorous
Flea,"loctober 17, .19, 20,
25, 26 and 28, and
"Ohe I , Flew Oyer the
Cuckoo's Nest," October
31, November 2,3, 6,7, 8, 9
*Net ",
•:::::::::
HUB
Shoppers find prices stable
NEW YORK Shoppers used to pinching their pennies got
a break at the supermarket yesterday: plenty of beef at the
meat counters and big sale signs in the windows.
The situation remained Unsettled two days after the end of
the
.beef price ceiling and the beginning of new regulations on
other foods. But an Associated Press survey found that prices
in most areas were stable and in a few cities there were
declines.
"Mrs. Consumer has won the battle," a New York meat
wholesaler said. He said more and more cattle was being
slaughtered and there might be a glut on the market. •
Stores in Hartford, Conn., advertised,a variety of beef sales
this week. Ground chuck, which had been $1.09 a pound, was
on sale at 99 cents a pound and porterhouse steak was $1.79 a
pound, compared to $1.99 earlier.
The Connecticut Agriculture Department said dairy prices
were rising, with butter at $1.05 a pound, compared to 87 cents
three weeks ago.
Negotiators discusS contracts
DETROIT With a strike deadline two days away,
negotiators for Chrysler Corp: and the United Auto Workers
were tied up yesterday in subcommittee discussion of
individual issues.
There were no reports of progress on major issues as the
contract expiration time .of 11:59 p.m. tomorrow approached.
UAW PresidekLeonard Woodcock had indicated that
yesterday '.`cout - be a critical day" in the talks.
Among the' - subjects believed under discussion was the
union's demand, strongly resisted by the auto industry, that
employes be allowed to refuse overtime work.
Despite the lack of major break-throughs, UAW Vice
President Douglas Fraser indicated after ;a 12-hour
bargaining session Tuesday that there was still time to avoid a
strike by the UAW's 127,500 Chrysler workers.
Chrysler last month offered the UAW wage-benefit
improvements totaling three per cent a year, far below the 6.2
per cent federal guideline and the settlements of about 7 per
cent won by rubberworken and Teamsters earlier this year.
Credit to remain scarce
WASHINGTON Credit will remain tight in the coming
months, Federal Reserve Board Chairman Arthur Burns said
yesterday, with mortgage loans still scarce and home
building restricted.
PENN STATE
JUDO CLUB
Invites New Members
to attend an
Introdilctory Meeting
Thursday Sept. 13th
p 7:30 p.m.
in the Ree Hall Wrestling Room
EVERYONE IS INVITED
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The Daily Collegian Thursday, September 13, 1973-
But he challenged the contention of critics that Federal
Reserve policiei restricting the flow of money had caused the
housing slowdown.
The housing -industry is overbuilt, Burns told the House
Banking Committee, and there are twice as many unsold new
houses today as two years ageo.
"By late 1972, overbuilding and high prices had set the stage
for a downturn in residential construction," Burns said. "The
ensuing decline in housing starts got under way long before
supplies of mortgage credit began to affect home building
adversely."
Burns said a record-high amount of mortgage credit in the
savings and loan associations, savings banks and a growing
number of private mortgage carriers both fed inflation and
led to the housing boom.
- Another key factor, Burns said, was overspending by the
federal and state and local governments. Another was the
reluctance of Congress to increase taxes, he said.
Flood forecast system okayed
HARRISBURG -- The Susquehanna River Basin
Commission yesterday approved a $268,000 project to
improve the flood forecasting system along the Susquehanna
River and its tributaries. -
The agency still must apply to Congress for funding of the
project, which will expand and replace the warning system
that broke down during tropical storm Agnes. -
The commission, composed of New York, Pennsylvania,
Wiryland and the U.S. Department of the Interior, approved
a two-part program:
—Replacing obsolete flood detection gauges; replacing
gauges'destroyed by the flood, and installing the equipment
at several communities that did not previously have it.
—Providing assistance to local flood warning committees
insetting up their own gauge equipment and coordinating
information between them.
The commission also approved a $l.l million budget fof
1974-75, up from the current $617,381. The increase is for
contract work • with the three states and the federal
government, principally flood plain mapping.
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