'* e Daily Collegian Friday. September 20, 1974 m T m #_ m.j-. Philadelphia, was charged # /f/VO/j with making an unsafe lane • Ml |/V/ change. Steven A. McCurry, 24, of j. " . / Newtown Square, was treated #it at Ritenour for facial injuries ** •# Vf sustained early Sunday when * his bicycle collided with a car m , ' driven by Matthew Oladunjoye (graduate f/ f Cf C<f Iy/ physical education). State College police said McCurry _ was driving on the wrong side at the street with no lights Ft when the accident occurred. • Ronald J. Secord (7th agriculture) was injured Sunday when his car jumped the curb and struck a tree on High Street south of Beaver Avenue. Suzanne P. Patemo, wife of football coach Joe Patemo, was involved in a two-car collision on S. Burrowes St. Tuesday with Robert M. Shirk of State College. Damage was slight and there were no in juries. Three ;University students were injured in auto ac cidents reported to police this week. Doyle P. Skinner (graduate solid state science) was one of four persons injured in a two cqr collision on University Drive Saturday. Also hurt were Douglas and Sheila Skinner, botn22, and Patricia , Prior, 21, all of Harrisburg. The driver of the other car, Jerald Archibald, 21, of WORSHIP j in th£ Fellowship of the * Church of the J NAZARENE South on Rte. 322 3 mi. at Panorama Village » Pastor Richard G. Diffenderfer Services, Sunday: Bible Study 9=30 a.m Worship 10:45 a.m. Evening Inspiration 7:00 p.m Wednesday-’ Prayer and Meditation 7'-30 p.m Film-' “The Gospel Road” featuring Johnny Cash REG. $1.29 * TWO PIECES OF FINGER-LICKIN GOOD KENTUCKY FRIED CHICKEN * MASHED POTATOES * CREAMY COLE SLAW * ROLL vailable everyday, all day only at fried Cklci&n Have a barrel of fun 131 S. Garner St. State College 1096 N. Atherton St. State College 127 W. Bishop St. Bellefonte At five that afternoon, Suzanne Paterno called State For Transportation j Call: | 466-6805 | 238-0044 ! •• 238-7040 I el’s nner * GRAVY College police to report that her son David, 8, had been bitten on the head and face by a dog belonging to F.M. Williams, 420 Sorbonne Terrace. A fire extinguisher was stolen from Lyons Hall Monday afternoon, according to Katherine Way,' house keeping supervisor of South Halls. Town and campus police reported the thefts;of nine bicycles since last Friday, plus one attempted theft. Gay talks on German camps By JANICE SELINGEE Collegian Staff Writer “To be gay is just as dangerous as being a Jew,” Jewish gay activist Janet ARE YOU RIPE FOR A PIPE? We have an extraordinary pipe ~Qf\ and Tobacco department. Dunhill... Sasieni... Balkan Sobranie Comoy... Mcßarens We are SPECIALISTS!! PLUS: Full time film developing service 1) Developing & printing —4B hours 2) Ektachrome Processing 24 hrs. 3) Prints from slides 72 hrs. Marcelle “Hypo Allergenic" Cosmetics and of course a complete prescription department. PENN'VMuv^iiui^.W. 101 E. Beaver Avs. ' Phone 238-8423 Penn State College OPEN 8:30 a.m. to 10 p.m. Mon-Sat Cooper said last night at a meeting of the Homophiles of Penn State. Cooper, who claims she lost heit tenure as a literature professor at Shippensburg State College because of her activism, paralleled the oppression of Jews and gays inj Auschwitz and today. I Cooper said the speech came at an appropriate time the week between the two holiest Jewish holidays of the year, Rosh Hashana and Yom Kippur. .“What disturbs me most about my experience facing both anti-semitism and anti gay feeling is how mutually excluded and isolated both Jews and gays feel toward each other,” Cooper said. “Neither group sees the inhumanity that is common to both prejudices ” she added. \ Jews were exterminated in Auschwitz just because they were Jews, Cooper said, but Hjey can’t feel a kinship for gal's who were also killed in concentration camps. Homosexuals were made to wear a pink triangle and were systematically annihilated just as the Jews were forced to wear the Star of David. Copper said. ~v;- * 1 Cooper tried to get her elementary . education students to wear gay button? for 24 hours so they cotild see what it is like to be gay. But they wouldn’t wear the buttons. Cooper said the oppression gays feel today is “as if had not stopped but just had subtly gone undergrojund.” Gays have a history and culture and identity, Cooper said, but people know little about them. Cooper said her ideas for the speech came wh°n she attended I a program in New York called “Auschwitz The Beginning of the New Erp.” Cooper said she was angry because groups other than Jews that were sent to Ger man concentration camps, such as gays, gypsies and Seventh Day Adventists, were not invited. Cooper said she will teach a Free University course on Gay and Erotic Minority Studies. She said she hopes to help these people achieve self-fulfillment and help straights to understand and appreciate their own sexual choices. "Play it again Sam" starring Woody Allen I presented by North Halls 1 105 Forum price 75* Sept. 20, 21, 22 Introducing a new course in practical journalism JOURN 126 126. INTRODUCTION TO THE DAILY COLLEGIAN (0:0:30) A concise introduction to the workings of The Daily Collegian. Included in this non-credit course are writing style, techniques of copy-editing, and reporting for the Collegian. Prerequisites: must be Penn State student. ’ 1 3 A REGISTRATION DATE Wednesday, Sept. *25 7:30 p.m. 62 Willard ' ' i . No bursar's receipt or matric required. YOU CAN EARN FROM Phone 237-5761 237-5762 If you qualify as a plasma donor, you will be making a significant contribution in fighting such dread problems as child birth diseases, leukemia, hemophilia, etc. Latest scientific developments permit donations every week without weakness or special diet or after effe&ts. MeS£ SERA TEC BIOLOGICAIS 120 SOUTH ALL BN STREET (REAR) / STATE COLLEGE, PA 16801 GROUP A, GROUP B, GROUP AB AND GROUP O ARE NEEDED IN THIS CONTINUOUS PROGRAM, CONDUCTED WITH COMPLETE SAFETY. Project plan n ByDAVESHAFFER Collegian Staff Writer The State College 1 Borough Planning Commission last night voted against ac cepting plans for a new housing development for Penfield Road next to the Centre Hills Country Club. The Commission recommendations will be submitted to Borough Council for review in connection with the public hearing being held on the development proposals. Council will make the final decision. The specific faults found in the site plan may require an entirely new approach to the development, so the Commission said before approval an entirely new plan would have to be submitted. The development is designed to include 138 single family homes —l4 row houses and the rest built in clusters of four or five on what are approximately double lots. The commission asked for a redesign of the plan, - removing houses from 25 per cent slopes and the floodplain off Branch Road. This would relocation of about 40 houses, Commissioner James Deeslie said. Much discussion last night and at other public meetings concerned who will be the actual developer of the site. The 322 Corporation owns the land, but it has given no firm indication whether it is requesting the rezoning approval with the intent of building the project or selling the land after $6O TO $lOO PER MONTH the development plans are approved. Commissioner Carol Herrmann said she would like to have discussions with the actual developer and termed an “unhappy situation” rumors’ the rezoning is being sought to increase the land value for speculation. A complete report on the problems associated with the’plan will be submitted to Council at its October 7 meeting. Neighboring residents are almost unanimously opposed to the development and have voiced their disapproval at the public hearing this month. In other action, the commission considered amendments to the proposed State College Rezoning plan. Most debated was a rezoning proposal which would make way for more student apartments close to campus. The rezoning of the area south of Fairmont between Pugh and Allen Streets would allow six story apartment buildings under the R-4 zoning. The Commission agreed to allow only four story apartments (45 feet high) in the rezoning plan. Other matters for con sideration were re-scheduled to a closed work session. The rezoning plan has been discussed for about a year and a half and it still is un certain when the plan-will be ready for Borough Council, which will make final decision on the rezoning. Rockefeller worth over $62 million WASHINGTON (AP) newsmen in advance ot Nelson A. Rockefeller said congressional hearings on his yesterday that his personal nomination to be vice holdings are worth $62.5 president. Confirmation million and that in addition he hearings begin Monday receives income from trusts before the Senate Rules wifh assets of $l2O million. Committee. A preliminary report to D , „ ... , . Congress earlier had set Rockefeller said he wanted Rockefeller’s personal ‘° set th * record straight holdings at $33 million, because of the $33 million However, that figure was reported earlier. At the time, never interpreted as the vice Rockefeller was said to be president-designate’s net Paring another statement ort jj giving more detailed in- Rockefeller, heir to one of form ation. America’s great family Rockefeller said the new fortunes, made the disclosure statement was “final and in statements distributed to complete.” You the student are the best defense against campus crime. Engravers are available at the H.U.B. and at Campus Patrol. Use them! Re port all thefts immediately to Campus Patrol; call 865-5458. Daytime hours 8:30 am - 8:30 pm Mon - Thurs 8:30 am - 4:00 pm Fri ALL BLOOD TYPES i URGENTLY NEEDED! ixed
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers