The daily collegian. (University Park, Pa.) 1940-current, December 06, 1974, Image 4

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    —The Daily Collegian Friday, December 6, 1974
Free bike registration tomorrow
Police Services will hold a
special bicycle registration 2
to 4 p.m. tomorrow at the
following locations:
—Hamilton Court (West)
—Warnock Quad (North)
Collegian notes
—Johnson Hall Patio
(East)
—Pollock Hall Patio (Nit
tany, Pollock, Centre and
South)
Only bicycles not registered
for 1974 need to be registered.
All current bicycle licenses
expire May 31.
The USG Supreme Court
43 bicycles which have been will hear constitutional Students with copies of
•'1
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'4 ONE HUIDREDNEAS
Philadelphia Cheese Steaks
ANNOUNCES
DELIVERY ON CAMPUS
Deliveries
from 5 p.m. - 2 a.m.
EVERYDAY
116 Heister Street
420 Clay Lane
Lemon Tree' Coin Op
. Dry Cleaning
Save Money on your Dry Cleaning!!
Average cost for dry cleaning:
We do it for you.
Convenient hours
7:30 a.m. until 11:30 p.m. 7 DAYS A WEEK
FREE PARKING ALL 3 LOCA TIONS
Lemon Tree East
709 Bellaire Ave.
237-3882
abandoned or impounded are
being held by Police Services.
Owners may claim them by
properly describing and
identifying them at Police
Services in the east end of
Grange. Those not claimed by
Dec. 19 will be sold.
The Life Sciences Library, _
205 East Pattee, will conduct The • Baha'i Student
orientation programs today, i Association is sponsoring an
hourly, from 9 to 11 a.m. 'information table on the HUB
and 1 to 4 p.m. Separate ground floor until Tuesday
arrangements can be made
by calling the librarian at 865-
7056
mcyer weiers
has a special gift for the giver
Slacks $.65
Dresses .65
Sweaters .40
Suit $1.30
Above prices figured at 65 cents
a pound for dry cleaning.
Lemon Tree North
Lemon Tree Downtown 2110 N. Atherton St.
234 W. College Ave. 237-3897
237-9525 . I
revision: requests for the
Inter-Varsity Christian
Fellowship and registration
requests for the P.S. Students
for Free Religious Thought,
the Frisbee Team of PSU, and
the United Federation of Star
Trek Fos 7:30 p.m. Sunday
in 2038.
The PSU Figure Skating
Club will meet'•6th period at
the Ice Pavilion.
(
) 10%
OFF
~,,, .......... ,n ~ \
valuable With it
I, s i i (•••
10% discount on iry
sf diamond sew t
vast inventory
. to show you our
dollar selection of • I
lry II it has a ,
sir, any price)
( 11 :
2--•tg i 1 1 , , .. . 4
Diamonds
make a
Christmas
'k i ft
of
love.
"Personnel Management: A
Management Science Ap
proach," by Paul S. Greenlaw
and Robert D. Smith, have
been asked to sell their books
back to any bookstore. The
book is in short supply.
Herbert Überall, physics
professor at the Catholic
University of America, will
speak on "Surface Waves in
Acoustics" at 4 today in 173
Willard.
Raymond Ciervo, faith
minister and teacher at
Salem School of the Bible in
Brooklyn, will speak
7:30 tonight in 101 Chambers
at a Gospel Businessmen
Fellowship meeting.
The Penn State Fashion
Council, in cooperation with
Butterick-Vogue, will present
a fashion show 3 p.m. Sunday
in the HUB lounge.
Packaged bomb kills employe
PITTSBURGH (AP) A
bomb wrapped in a plain
brown package exploded
before dawn yesterday at a
United Parcel Service center
here, killing one worker and
injuring eight others.
Police said wires protruded
from the package, which was
removed from the conveyor
belt because it was im
properly addressed, and
workers joked about it being a
bomb.
It exploded when Jack Metz
opened it, hoping to find- an
invoice for a correct address.
Melvin Scarpaci, an injured
employe, said Metz ex
claimed "Look, its a bomb."
Seconds later, it exploded in
Metz's face, killing him.
"I heard it and saw it," said
one worker in the blast area.
"I saw a big ball of flames."
Another employe said the
blast knocked him against a
truck.
"I came over to the other
side and there were bodies all
over the middle of the floor,"
he said. "Pieces of bodies
were laying there and there
was blood everrbere." •
Workers said ' , the UPS
center, on the city's North
Side, had received telephoned
bomb threats. But police
refused to confirm or deny
this.
Police have ruled the death
the 38-year-014 driver from
nearby Bellevue a homicide.
Two of the injured were
treated and released from
local hospitals and the rest
Once there were two
mice who lived in a
museum. ar--
DOONESBURY
were in satisfactory con-
Pampena admitted there
dition. was a possibility that the
Meanwhile, a spokesmanc- package was incorrectly
from Teamster Local 249 said labeled so a UPS employe
the 100 UPS drivers were 'would have to open it
working. There were earlier
reports that employes were
refusing to return to work
until all packages were in
spected.
The bomb exploded about 3
a.m. in an enclosed area near
the loading dock at one of the
block-long cement structure
where 90,000 to 110,000
packages are sorted each
night.
The FBI was assisting loCal
homicide and bomb arson
dettives in determining
whe'e in southwestern
Pennsylvania the package
was destined. None of the
investigating agencies would
comment, however.
Lt. Ralph Pampena of the
city's homicide squad said
police know to whom the
package was addressed
"It was not addressed to
anyone notable. There are
recordi and now we are
trying to determine who sent
it," he said.
Asst. Police Supt. Robert
Coll said the package was
intended for a business
establishment and was sent
from a neighboring state.
An unidentified UPS
worker said the package was
addressed to a motorcycle
shop in "Falls Church, Pa.,"
and had no zip code. The post
office does not list such a
community.
One evening after the
museum had closed,the
first mouse crawled into
a huge suit of armor.
- .
A spokesman at UPS
headquarters in New York
said there was no reason to
believe the bomb was in
;tended to damage the plant or
injure the driver.
The explosion touched off a
small fire, which was quickly
extinguished with foam by
employes. Damage to the
machinery in the blast area
"amounted to nothing at all,"
Ford meets top German
WASHINGTON (UPI) Meeting a major
European ally for the first time since taking
office, President Ford yesterday discussed
economic, energy and peace problems with
West German Chancellor Helmut Schmidt.
Schimdt received a 21-gun welcome from
Ford, Secretary of State Henry A. Kissinger
and 1,000 others on the South Lawn at the
start of the German's two days of White
House talks. In his welcoming address, Ford
called it an historic occasion.
Both men list . L.d these things as the chief
topics of their discussions the economy,
the energy shortage and the Atlantic
alliance's part in peace-seeking East and
West.
U.S. and West German diplomats said
there is no major problem between the two
countries but that Schmidt, as leader of the
most powerful of America's European allies,
could help Ford align the U.S. global policies
on such matters as how to handle Arab oil
Before he knew it, he
was lost "Help!" he
shouted to his friend
according to a UPS
spokesman.
Officials said there was
little fire damage and no
structural damage from the
blast.
It
i blew a hole in a table,
twisted lighting fixtures,
tossed debris in the air and
rippcd an air conditioning
unit out of the wall.
A, dispatcher in the city
bonro3 and arson squad said
the size of the bomb will be
difficult to determine because
the blast was not contained.
"But you can say it was a
good ,blast," he added.
producers with such sometimes break-away
Atlantic partners as France.
Both leaders said only through stronger
trans-Atlantic cooperation can the Western
nations solve today's problems. "We are
resolved to do this," Schimdt said and Ford
nodded.
In other White House developments:
Press Secretary Ron Nessen said Ford
has thought about a tax cut to fight the
recession, but it is still only an idea and is far
from a decision. "He's aware of the idea, the
concept of a tax cut...but it has come no
where near a decision." Nessen said a tax cut
now is only a theory not even a proposal.
President Ford shows "no irritation"
over House Minority Leader John J. Rhodes'
suggestion that the President veto fewer
bills. Nessen said Ford has in the past and
wants to in the future cooperate with
Congress. He said Ford and Rhodes will
continue their cooperation on legislation.
9OiwuOjco.
Post House Tavern
146 N. Atherton Street
State College
!'Help me make it
through the knight!"
0~~
Police and FBI agent - S ,
cordoned off the area im
mediately and dogs trained to
smell explosives were
brought in to inspect the area.
Allegheny General Hospital
said Dale McGinley, 23, and
Robert Bahl, 26, were in
satisfactory condition with
cuts and bruises.
Officials at St. Johns
Hospital said Joseph
Bergman, 33, Lawrence
Benson, 25, Douglas Raley,
38, and Robert• Lowe, 25, were
all in satisfactory condition.
All the injured were Pitts
burgh residents.
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