The daily collegian. (University Park, Pa.) 1940-current, April 10, 1974, Image 6

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    —The Daily Collegian Wednesday, April 10,1974
Senate hopefuls
have little funds
HARRISBURG (AP) The Democratic
race for the U.S. Senate nomination
currently features four candidates with little
money.
Former Insurance Commissioner Herbert
S. Denenberg has raised between $35,000 and
$40,000. The low figure caused cancellation of
a planned media advertising campaign.
Pittsburgh Mayor Peter F. Flaherty said
he’s just starting to raise funds for the May 21
primary. He said he won’t disclose the
amount collected until early May 2, when
contributions must be reported.
James M. Quigley, on leave as vice
president of a paper and pulp manufacturing
firm, said he’s raised no funds yet and won’t
have time for an elaborate contribution
network. He hopes to solicit by telephone and
mailings and plans to purchase radio time.
The Rev. Frank Mesaros has raised $2,200
too small for radio and television ad
vertisements, said
Angelo Ventresca of Philadelphia.
Denenberg’s press secretary, Robert
Hoffman, called the amount raised so far a
disappointment. He said another $20,000 was
needed to put together a large campaign
organization, to pay for election day
Penn State Blut? Band
Majorette try-outs April 20 & 21
Application forms and information
available in 217 Chambers Building
The College of Engineering will hold
Elections for Student Representatives to the
University Faculty Senate
April lOand 11, 8 a.m. to 5 p.m.
Undergraduate Engineering Students
May Vote at One of Three Locations:
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operations and to buy some radio ad
vertisements.
“But unless we get a large amount of
money in the next three weeks there will not
be an extensive media campaign,” Hoffman
said.
Hoffman offered these theories for the lack
of money:
The Allegheny County Democratic
organization’s support for Flaherty, which
dried up possible Denenberg funds in the
Pittsburgh area.
The uncommitted stance of the
Philadelphia Democratic organization,
which is having the same effect on funds
there.
Denenberg’s positions on- abortion,
capital punishment and amnesty, which
slowed contributions from some liberals.
Denenberg has said he favors abortion only
in cases of rape, incest or when the health of
the mother is endangered. He favors capital
punishment for serious crimes; and he ac
cepts amnesty on a case-by-case basis. While
he would pardon men who refused to serve
for moral reasons, he favors alternative
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Irish peace plan
BELFAST, Northern
Ireland (AP) Britain’s
fragile peace plan* for
Northern Ireland is in
trouble from restive Roman
Catholics and Protestant
hardliners.
Protestant leaders them
selves are divided and
militants among them are
already talking of civil war.
Nearly 1,000 persons have
died in more than-4% years of
violence. There are fears that
Easter weekend, a traditional
time for demonstrations by
the province’s Roman
Catholic minority, may bring
a fresh'surge of violence.
Brian Faulkner, chief
Summer and Fall Terms
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Penn State
Microbiology Club
BLOOD TYPING
Today - Wed, April 10
Ground Floor Hub
9:00-4:30
ABO Rh Factor $.25 each
UNIVERSITY CALENDAR
Wednesday, April 10
SPECIAL EVENTS
Music da Camera, 8:30 p.m., Music Bldg, recital hall.
Talk. “The Art of Lighting,” by Gerald B. Ewing, 8 p.m., Schwab, with film, slides,
readings, and dances.
Sports: Men’s tennis, vs. Bucknell, 3 p.m.
Noontime Concert, 12:15 p.m., lobby of Kern.
Five O’clock Theatre, “Temple of Gold,” 5:20 p.m., Pavilion Theatre.
SEMINARS
Computation Center, 7:30 p.m. JCL (6), Room 110 Osmond; Graphics (6), Room 228
Computer Bldg.
Biochemistry, 4 p.m., Room 101 Althouse. Linda Stong on “Reconstitution of the
Mitochondrial Electron Transport System and Oxidative Phosphorylation.”
LECTURES
Dr. Irwin Altman, Professor and Chairman of the PepafflßKra of Psychology,
University of Utah, on “The Ecology of Interpersonal {(eqpMnships,” 4 P- m >
Room S-131 Human Development. The public is invited.
MEETINGS
Academic Assembly, 7:30 p.m., Room 351 Willard.
Undergraduate Political Science Association, 7:30 p.m., Room 271 Willard. Dr.
Chang on “Recent Development in China: A Traveler’s View.”
Hillel, 8 p.m., HUB Reading Room. Dr. Johnson on “Sex and the Self Concept.”
FILMS
Commonsplace Theatre, “David Copperfield,” 8 and 10 p.m., Room 112 Kern.
EXHIBITS
Museum of Art Eight Dulin National Print and Drawing Competition Exhibition,
Gallery B. Selections from the Permanent Collection, Gallery A. Bill Hanson,
Harvard Paintings, Gallery C.
Zoller Gallery Contemporary Chinese Paintings.
Chambers Gallery Children’s Art Exhibition.
Kern Gallery—Lee Ann and Dennis Kennedy, pottery.
Black Cultural Center Smithsonian Travelling Exhibit on James Weldon Jackson,
Dlack lawyer, politician, poet and .diplomat.
HUB Art Alley Ukranian Club Exhibit.
Larry Coryell
executive of the province’s
domestic government, has
repeatedly stressed his
misgivings about the British
peace plan.
Faulkner, the leader of an
administration situated
between the warring religious
factions, controls only one
part of what was for half a
century the dominant voice in
northern politics the
Protestant-based Unionist
party.
He now faces restlessness
among those Unionists who
have gone along with him in
accepting the premise that
the Catholic minority should
shaky
have a real voice in govern
ment.
In a meeting on Monday,
Faulkner reportedly told
Merlyn Rees, British cabinet
member in charge of North
ern Ireland affairs, that
his party was uneasy at
London’s plans to release
an unspecified number
of suspected republican
terrorists from internment.
The released men will have
to find “sponsors” from their
locality to give a so-far
undefined guarantee of good
behavior.
Belfast newspapers have
derided the scheme as naive,
dubbing it the “take home a
terrorist” plan.
The release scheme is in
tended to appease Roman
Catholics in Faulkner’s ad
ministration, represented by
the Social Democratic and
Labor party led by Gerry
Fitt. The party’s militants
want to pull out of govern
ment unless internment is
drastically reduced.
Faulkner, according to
informed sources, told Rees
his party is unhappy with the
legalizing of two long
outlawed groups, the
Protestant-based Ulster
Volunteer Force and the
Provisional Sinn Fein,
political front of the Irish
Republican Army guerrillas
who want to get Northern
Ireland out of the United
Kingdom.
He faces the threat of
defections to hardline
elements opposed to power
sharing, and thus a further
erosion of his political base.
To counter that threat,
Faulkner is likely to come out
against ratification of last
year’s Belfast-Dublin-London
agreement to set up a council
of Ireland and thus give the
republic a voice in northern
affairs.
Yet he knows that a council
of Ireland is one of the Social
Democrats’ conditions for
staying in the government.
The violence and killing
continue in Northern Ireland
and across the Irish Sea in
England.
Coryell to play
with jazz group
Jazz guitarist Larry Coryell will make his third Penn State
appearance 8 p.m. Saturday in Schwab. He will perform with
his new band, Eleventh House. Also in the concert sponsored
by The Jazz Club is local jazz group Silent Way.
Coryell’s high-powered jazz-rock fusion has taken on new
sound with his new musical group. The sound has been likened
to the now-defunct Mahavishnu Orchestra and is provided by
four other musicians besides Coryell.
Eleventh House features trumpeter Randy Brecker, for
merly of Blood, Sweat and Tears, drummer Alphonse Mouson,
formerly of Weather Report, Mike Mandel on piano and syn
thesizer and Dan Trifan on bass guitar.
The new group has received critical praise following its con
certs in New York, London'and Washington. Stereo Review
called Coryell “...the most consistently inventive and in
teresting instrumentalist in pop...Coryell just doesn’t play the
guitar, he is the guitar. ’ ’
Coryell has been noted for his improvisational ability and
allows the group members to take rides during the numbers.
He follows the jazz format of theme-solo-theme and critics
have said improvisation is the highlight of the group’s con
certs.
Tickets are $3 each and may be purchased on the ground
floor of the HUB.
Battle reports differ
in Mideast fighting
By THE AP
The Syrian command
claimed yesterday it had
beaten back Israeli forces
with ground-to-ground
missiles in escalated fighting
on the Golan Hieghts.
The battle on the 29th
straight day of fighting was
reported in the northern
sector of the 1973 cease-fire
line near Biblical Mt. Her
mon. Israel denied Syrian
claims to have inflicted heavy
losses.
“Our guns and antitank
system scored direct hits on
an enemy tank formation that
was rushing toward the
frontline edge of the northern
sector and inflicted heavy
losses,” a Syrian military
communique said.
But the Israeli command
reported, “Our forces suf
fered no casualties.” It gave
no further details.
The northern sector is the
300-square-mile salient on the
Kunaitra-Damascus road
which Israel captured in the
October war.
On the snow-capped
mountain where Israel
maintains a vital observation
post, bitter ground fighting
raged throughout the day.
There was no word of air
activity by either side
following the Israeli loss
Monday of its first Phantom
fighter-bomber since the
October war.
The Syrian command also
said artillery and tank duels
flared along the rest of the 40-
mile cease-fire line.
Kung-Fu, calligraphy shown
in Chinese art demonstration
Penn State and State
College tomorrow will be one
of the stops of a group touring
the United States demon
strating Chinese arts.
Sponsored by the Chinese
Youth Goodwill Mission, the
group of 12 students and
faculty members from
various universities in Taiwan
will appear here through the
Penn State Chinese Student
Association.
The program will include
Kung-Fu demonstrations, folk
dances, demonstrations of
Chinese painting and
calligraphy, selections of
Chinese opera and Taiwan
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ADDRESS
Diplomatic sources in
Damascus said the fighting
has brought the two countries
to the brink of full-scale war.
Artillery was clearly
audible in Damascus at
midday as Jordan’s King
Hussein flew in for talks with
Syrian President Hafez Assad
on the Geneva peace talks,
the role of the Palestinians in
them and Syrian-Israeli
disengagement.
Official Syrian sources said
a seven-member Syrian team
headed by military in
telligence chief Gen. Hikmat
Chehabi was on tap to leave
for Washington for dis
engagement talks later this
week with U.S. Secretary
of State Henry A. Kissinger.
The sources stressed the
delegation was not em
powered to negotiate but
would only present ideas on
separating the two armies.
Negotiations on military
disengagement probably will
not take place until later this
month when Kissinger is
expected to return to the area
to resume his “shuttle
diplomacy.”
In Beirut, the two Israeli
pilots of a crashed F 4
Phantom were being treated
at a military hospital for
minor bruises sustained when
they bailed out over south
Lebanon Monday, a Defense
Ministry spokesman re
ported.
Lebanese authorities said
they were resisting pressure
from both Syria and Israel to
turn over the two pilots.
folk songs. A drill with swords
and a parade of Chinese dress
of different historical periods
are also on the program.
Edwin Choy, president of
the Chinese Student Associ
ation, said the performers
were chosen for their talent
and their ability to speak
English in a highly com
petitive selection process.
“These are strictly chosen,
talented people,” Choy said.
The program will be held at
8 p.m. tomorrow in the State
College Area High School
Auditorium, with a reception
following.
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