The daily collegian. (University Park, Pa.) 1940-current, September 26, 1974, Image 8

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    X—The Daily Collegian Thursday, September 26. 1974
/ J / f An army spokesman in Tel Aviv said all
' flijC planes returned from their.midday attacks
c • w/ O 'on the same wooded hill country in southeast
*■ Lebanon singled - out in similar strikes
* Tuesday near the village of Mazrat Beit
S+lj Cj/7a iU Naful, 10 miles north of the border,
t* # # C» f#V w” Israeli forces call that part of Lebanon
"Fatahland,” because it had frequently
■ m In. , > served as base for Arab guerrilla attacks on
w/r/7 holiday r
• ' "We don’t intend to wait until they come
across the border to kill us,” the spokesman
said. "This is the preventive policy we have
been carrying out all along.”
hy L'nited Press International
Israel yesterday ushered in its most solemn
religious holiday of the year with a second
consecutive day of air 'strikes against
suspected Arab guerrilla targets in southern
l^ebanon
The raids came hours before the start at
sunset of Yom Kippur. the Jewish Day of
Atonement, which also marked the first
lunar calendar anniversary of the 18-day
Middle East war of 1973 when the holiday fell
on Oct 6.
In a newspaper interview. Prime Minister
Yitzhak Rabin said he had detailed
bargaining maps ready for the negotiating
table whenever one or morel, Arab states
agree "that the intention if to advance
towards peace " An interim settlement with
Syria, as well as Jordan and Egypt, was still
possible, he said
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The Nittany Lion...
Someday You Will Want to Remember.
ONE BOOK IS WORTH
A THOUSAND WORDS.
Order your 1975 yearbook at the La Vie
table on the ground floor of the HUB -
Sept. 23-27, 9:30 a.m. to 4:30 p.m.
Senior 800t — S9DO
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1 Newsmen in Lebanon said three separate
formations of six planes Skyhawks and
Phantoms machine gpnned wooded
ravines and farmland for about 10 minutes
each but reported no casualties. In Tuedsay’s
attack, the Lebanese defense ministry
reported, one civilian truck was destroyed
and farms and orchards damaged.
Israeli military sources reported no
unusual activity along the borders with
Egypt or Syria, but police appealed to the
public for "maximum vigilance” against
guerrilla attacks. Traffic was banned on
Jordan River bridges and police put up
roadblocks to prevent entry of West Bank
vehicles into Israel proper.
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Undergrai
Forget orgy after Greek gorging
' *1
By LEAH ROZEN
Collegian Staff Writer,
The Greeks had a word for
it. Gorge yourself. ■ .
That’s exactly what the 53
persons attending Food,
Service and Housing 410’s
“Ancient Athenian Dinher
Party” did last night at!the
Maple Room. . j
The course’s students
served a huge meal Ather ian
style, complete with tog as,
finger bowls, backgroi nd
flute music. There were no
eating utensils Other than the
diner’s fingers. |
’ At the beginning of the
meal, asked,
“When’s the orgy?” |
“After dinner,” replied the
hostess, a student in t!he
course. After eating through
six different hor d’oeuvrOs,
which included stuffed clams
and escargots, a main couijse
of braised rabbit served with
Pollution:
it s a crying shame
But does it have to be? Not if
you do something about it. Sjo
the next time you see pollution
point it out to someone who :
can do something about it,
Blip
TlP[_£ FREEWHEEL SPOKE HUQ RIM TIRE TUBE RUBBER & RAT TRAP PEDALS
jir
-
HANDLE BAR STEM GRIP
LAMP BRACKET
Service on All Brands
Full line of Accessories
480 E. College Ave.
(1 block east of McDonalds)
$7.00
lots of vegetables, unending
loafs of whole wheat bread,
and at. least four kinds of !
dessert, who could possibly
make it to an orgy?
Mike Mosko. (i2th-food,
service and housing), food .
manager for the Athenian
dinner, told'the diners at the
start of the meal, “You may
be wondering why there’s no
silverware on the table. Well,
we ask you to throw away the ,
rules of etiquette.” :
“Eat with your fingers—
wipe your fingers with your
bread, do anything you want.
Throw the bread on the,
floor,” he added. 1
Some of the customers did
just that, along 1 with their
clam shells and rabbit bones.
The dinner companion of a
particularly 'ardent flinger
said, “He eats just like this at
home.”
In the kitchen, the students
responsible for the meal had ■,
been cooking since 2:20 p.m. -
to meet their first deadline at. J\Jq SllVGtWdfG
5:30 p.m.
Food, Service and Housing in the,lBoos."
410 is a course open only to His class divides into two
majors. sections, each of which is
Instructor Leo Renaghan responsable for one meal a
chooses eight different meals week. Last night’s Athenian
at the beginning of the, dinner was the first of the
course. These “follow the de- term. A Roman banquet will
velopment of cuisine from be served tonight,
ancient Greece up to the U.S. During the second half of
SAODELS SISSTBAR & BACK
REST
UNCLE
ELI’S
ART SUPPLIES
HELL k. HORN
PUMOS REFLECTOR BACK
MIRROR
(I derailleurs
AND
GALLERY
126 HUMES
Just in! A large shipment of antique jframes & prints $1 &up
Many sizes, shapes and subject matters to choose from.
' __ 1
He eats just like this at home!
the term the class is
responsible for planning
another eight meals.
'"Most of them (the
students! seem more in
terested in contemporary
cuisine,” Renaghan said.
Meals are held twice a week
during Fall and Winter Terms
Tape equipment
installed for trial
WASHINGTON lUPI) U.S. District judges continued to
dispose of pre-trial motions yesterday as technicians installed
tape equipment in Judge John J. Sirica’s courtroom in
preparation for the Watergate cover-up trial next Tuesday.
An aide to Sirica said the tape facilities would include
earphones for the jury lawyers and members of
the press for use when the tapes of presidential conversations
are played during the trial.
Lawyers for each of the six defendants will have their own
microphones to use when addressing the jury, the aide said,
because the decision to give each defendant his own table
means that some will be seated at a distance.
Meanwhile, U .S. District Judge Gerhard Ges?el dismissed a
suit by a New York lawyer who.had challenged President
Ford's pardon of former President Richard M. Nixon, and
ruled that the lawyer, Joseph H. Koffler, had no standing to
challenge the pardon.
Convicted Watergate conspirator James McCord has also
challenged the pardon on the grounds it is unfair to him and
other Watergate figures who are serving or are sentenced to
serve time in jail.
{ THE SCORPION 5
-k li7 S. Burrowes St. J
presents
* “Morningsong” J
m This week *
k Thur. thru Sat. *
f★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★!
hen yo
teed
oods
.they’i
fie one
to se'
Photo by Ed Paj»a
in the Maple Room, located in
the basement of the old
Human Development
Building. The average cost is
$5 per meal but varies ac
cording to what is being
served. Reservations and
information may be obtained
by calling 865-7441.