B—The Daily Collegian Wednesday, December 11, 1974 rom the wires News from the world and the nation Students seize campus ISTANBUL, Turkey (UPI) Rightwing students, some firing pistols and throwing Molotov cocktails, seized the campus of Istanbul University yesterday in the latest incident of five weeks of nationwide campus unrest, police said. No injuries were reported. Police armored cars equipped with water cannons surrounded the campus but made no immediate attempt to enter it. "They the students moved into the campus firing pistols and throwing Molotov cocktails," a witness said. "Then they raided lecture h i ls and forced students out of law school classes." The students closed the large wrought iron :gates of the campus once the Defense Ministry of the Ottoman Empire and allowed indanly sympathizers. University officials said Rector Haluk Alp averted fighting by first persuading leftwing students to leave the university premises and then talking the rightwingers into giving up their occupation of the lecture halls. Pa. national cemetery studied AP) Pennsylvania is being considered as the site for a national cemetery, possibly comparable to the one at Arlington, Va., military and Veterans Administption sources said yesterday. "We are going to build a shrine type cemetery of which the entire nation can be proud," said Rufus Wilson, director of the VA's National Cemetery System in Washington. "I would not say it'll be the same as Arlington. Arlington has a unique status in America," he said. "But it's going to be a UNIVERSITY CALENDAR Wednesday, Dec. 11 • SPECIAL EVENTS ' Artists Series film, Charlie Chaplin, "The Circus, 8:30 p.m., University Auditorium. Ala rd String Quartet, 8:30 p.m., Music Bldg. recital hall. International Festival, international talent, 12 noon, lobby, Kern. SEMINARS Ceramic Science, 11 a.m., Room 301 Mineral Industries. Dr. Eugene M. White, material science, on "Quantitative SEM Characterization of Particulates, Microstructures, and Fracture Surfaces." Fuel Science, 4 p.m., Room 301 Mineral Industries. John Cogoli, Combustion Lab., on "Char and Low Volatile Coal Combustion." Ecology, 3:55 p.m., Room 101 Electrical Engineering East. Dr. Dean E. Arnold, biology, on "The Suitability of Blue-Grass Algae as a Food Chain Link." • MEETINGS Central Penna. Chapter, Association of Computing Machinery, 8 p.m., Room 102 Kern. David M. Smith, Exxon Mathematics and Systems, on "Data Processing in the Time Period, 1980-85." Biological Society, 7:30 p.m., Room 8 Life Sciences. Dr. W. Burleigh Seaver, .Jr., psychology, on "Population Density and Social Pathology." Association for Women Students, 7 p.m., Room 203 HUB. FILM Commonsplace Theatre, "Grand Illusion," 7 and 9 p.m., Room 112 Kern. EXHIBITS • Museum of Art .Living American Artists and the Figure, Galleries A and C. 'Selections from the Perm anent Collection, Gallery B. HUB Main Lounge Photographic exhibit of major building, interior, and planning designs of Finnish architect, A l ivar Aalto (traveling Smithsonian Institution exhibit). Chambers Gallery David Don Tigney, ceramics. George Zoretich, paintings. Playhouse Gallery "Scenic Design Reflections," 53 scenic and costume designs by Robert Burroughs and Dennis Sporre. . i ~ ,Y.. - ' ' ; r ( f AvE ~,,' 10% . ... \ \ - , -I Cl= AnnivenarV mg We ve ne Thanksgetrun '''' lute, but the dated a 25th CM erve d a 1974 Fr ---- - big one." Wilson said $250,000 has been set aside for the present fiscal year to prepare, a master plan for the cemetery. He said planners have not yet decided on a location, but he did men tion the Gettysburg and Valley Forge areas as desirable. "We are looking for surplus federal land, primarily. If not that, then state surplus land," Wilson said. He said there were no plans now for a Tomb of the'Unknown Soldier or an amphitheater, such as exists at Arlington, but there will be a large visitor's center and other features similar to those at Arlington. Battle over deer rages „STIRLING, N.J. (UPI) Dozens of red-clad hunters stalked northern New Jersey's Great Swamp National Wildlife Refuge yesterday killing deer that wildlife officials say are in danger of starving. Environmentalist grdups tried in vain to stop the hunt. A dozen deer were shot down in the first two hours as 130 hunters spread through thick brush in the 6,009-acre sanc tuary after the Interior Department decided herds were becomihg too big. Environmentalist groups protested, but a three-memb i er panel of the Third Circuit of Appeals in PhiladelpMa turned down their request As the hunters arrived before dawn they were greeted by pickets with signs reading: "Wildlife Refuge Should Not be a Butcher Shop," and "Show Your Masculinity Where it Helps, Boys." William Whalen, regional spokesman for the National Fish and Wildlife Se vice, was asked if any of the hunters believed it was less sporting to hunt a starving herd. ~..... •,\j 10% ,- \ 0 .4 e l OFF 0•-•.... .- radualit. With it ." ....., 10% docount on ''''''' { oat f diamond raw- ../ I rast inmntory a shoat you ow . has selection of r ,4 0 If o hat a ' ~. \ ' ''': am my priml •:. i ) ) .1 I Correction Yesterday's Collegian incor rectly attributed statements by' Organization of Town In dependent Students member Ken Solarz to Ken Pletz. RECYCLE THIS PAPER Balfour Christmas List TWA)-pita jeuttywitKrcume4nuankto t 5 okx, a.7=sniAt. woFh Stcq)9 151.CatiS aPokrinswe chum) Vlbmtrtat, it ertmixtiO A win sitta4titutei. rroAL9 !taw. rt etretad ica) S tkfl AOLCVATI lnt I A, tSt> OWs(tect odematt) 6).a Agi t itt Uitifaib -4N/tAl0:119 cast, iffyixtet FILL YOUR CHRISTMAS LIST AT BALFOUR c'fiatiour "They don't feel that way. It is frankly a means of getting a much healthier herd," he said. Whalen said that the Interior Department hoped that as many as 350 of the 600 deer in the refuge would be taken during the six days of the hunt. Health programs approved WASHINGTON (AP) Compromise legislation to continue five health programs and establish several new ones, in cluding the first national effort to combat rape, has won House approval. The House voted 372 to 14 yesterday to approve $1.859 billion over two years for the programs. The House originally had approved $1.735 billion for two year funding while the Senate passed a measure calling for $3.154 billion over four years. The compromise measure now goes to the Senate. Among the programs extended and their funding authority were family planning, $472.5 million; community mental health centers, $303 million; migrant health programs, $155 million; community health centers, $540 million, and com prehensive public health services, $320 million. The National Center for Rape Prevention arid Control will be located within the National Institutes of MeOaf Health and will include research on ways to curtail rapesi help the vic tims and rehabilitate the offenders. Some $2O million was approved for this. Russian couple leave U.S. MOSCOW (UPI) A Russian couple returned illegally to the Soviet Union after four months in Philadelphia because life in the United States is too mercenary, the newspaper Sovetskaya Rossiya said yesterday. i The newspaper said Joseph and Annetta Shklyar flew to Moscow with a tourist' group and quoted Mrs. Shklyar as saying: "We will kiss all the stones in Odessa. For all those who want to leave the Soviet Union, let them first speak to me and my husband." It said formalities were being completed for the couple to return to Odessa, their home town on the Black Sea. According to the newspaper, the Shklyars left Odessa last August and lived with well-to-do relatives in a comfortable suburb of Philadelphia. "We found ourselves in an alien world," Annetta was quoted as saying. "Children there put their parents into old folks' homes and rarely visit them, and if a man was lying in the street they would not call an ambulance because of the cost of 326 E. College Ave. State College, Pa. 16801 the telephone call. "In the United States, everyone lives for himself and by himself. Everything, even relations between people, is decided by money." Separate trials requested WASHINGTON (UPI) Special Watergate Prosecutor Henry S. Ruth Jr. asked the U.S. District Court yesterday to reconsider its order giving former Treasury Secretary John B. Connally Jr. separate trials for bribery and perjury. Chief Judge George L. Hart Jr. granted Connally's motion for separate trials Nov. 25 during oral arguments. Connally was indicted last summer on charges of accepting a bribe of $lO,OOO in milk producer funds in exchange for his help in obtaining the 1971 increase in the federal price support for raw milk, and then lying about it. In the six-page motion, the prosecutor argued that it was "regular practice" for both substantive offenses and related false declaration charges to be tried at one time. During the oral arguments, Edward Bennett Williams, Connally's lawyer, argued that if both charges were tried at once, the trial jury might conclude from the alleged false ltatements that the illegal payments actually had occurred. The prosecutor said there was an "intimate connection" in the charges "and it would be appropriate to try them in a single trial." Vatican raps prison sentence VATICAN CITY (UPI) The Vatican said yesterday the 12- year prison sentence an Israeli court imposed on Greek Catholic Archbishop Hilarion Capucci was in conflict with the Holy Land's tradition of respect for religious leaders. The carefully worded statement, read out by Vatican spokesman Federico Alessandrini, did not say whether the Vatican considered Capucci innocent or guilty but predicted his conviction would increase Arab-Israeli tension. An Israeli court in Jerusalem convicted the bearded prelate Monday of contacting Palestinian guerrilla leaders in Beirut and smuggling weapons into Israel for sabotage purposes. "The Holy See has learned about the sentencing of Msgr. Hilarion Capucci with profound pain and regret, in the same way as it had expressed keen concern over his entire con troversial case,"l the statement said. In Jerusalem, Israeli State prosecutor Gabriel Bach said no moves are underway to deport Capucci rather than allowing him to serve out his prison sentence. 4( *********** - k*****-A-*****-A-******-4 . t CHARTER FLIGHT ; to * * 1 COTTON BOWL . Dec. 30 Jan. 2 (eve.) * * HARRISBURG TO DALLAS 4( * (morning departure)* (evening departure) * * for Penn State students, faculty and : 4( staff and their families * * 4( Includes air fare, hotel, transfers to 4 :. * hotel, parade, g ame and game tickets ** 4( Accommodations at the * * HILTON INN * * it * Flights also available from * '-x Pittsburgh and Philadelphia * * * An Alternative! : Bus trip from State College * -it -sc * -I( SIGN UP NOW"""""" -4E ic Centre for Travel - .1( r 'll4 Heister Street 238-4987 : gr****-k*****-******************** This coupon is worth oo OFF The price of any hanging pot (Must present coupon) Good till Dec. 24, 1974 Everything is increasing today except the . value of your dollar. This Christmas give a gift of green that will grow instead of get smaller. The Woodland Trail for plants, hanging pots, terrariums, etc. It doesn't take a lot of your green to get a lot of our green. 1 0-7 daily till 9 Fri. & Sat. 1601 N. Atherton in Ed's Discount Center N 0111111 "V A V IA THE PATH OF TOTAL AWARENESS 1 The purpose of ECKANKAR is to show how one may gain awareness of the inner planes before the death of the physical body. One may return to the realm of Spirit by means of the sound current, the ECK, or "Word." Free Introductory Lecture Wedneklay, December 11 316 Boucke 8 p.m. Speakers: Dr. Paul Klim and Jim Winters Slides & Discussion
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers