The daily collegian. (University Park, Pa.) 1940-current, February 06, 1975, Image 8

Below is the OCR text representation for this newspapers page. It is also available as plain text as well as XML.

    S—The Daily Collegian Thursday, February 6,1975
■ I ■ in Natanya, which j is
lOpSOil frequented by Zionist in-
IwlQwll telligence officers,” said a
statement from an extremist
guerrilla group'known as the
Popular Struggle Front.
A number of enemy in- said an unknown
‘5 en .u e o{(,ce Ji w J er , e assailant last week hurled a
killed, others wounded and the smoke grenade the same
club suffered heavy nightclub, the • Bar Orion,
damage, the statement said, frequented by young patrons.
In Tel Aviv, police said five
persons died and 27 were In Cairo, Egypt and the
wounded in a grenade ex- Soviet Union called , for an
plosion in a beach night club “immediate resumption” of
in the Mediterranean coastal " ■
town of Natanya, 15 miles
north of Tel Aviv.
The guerrillas said seven
were killed and 30 wounded.
An Israeli national police
spokesman said the attaqk
was the work of “thugs or an
underworld matter” and
night club
grenaded
By DPI
Palestinian guerrillas
\ esterday said they staged a
midnight grenade and
machine gun attack on an
Israeli coastal night club that
killed or wounded more than
two persons.
"One of our special units
operating inside the occupied
lerritories launched a
yrenade and machine- gun
attack on an Israeli night club
A career in law—
without law school.
What can you do with only a bachelor's degree?
Now there is a way to bridge the gap between an
undergraduate education and a challenging, respon
sible career The Assistant is able to do
work traditionally done by lawyers
Three months of intensive training can give you
the skills —the courses are taught by lawyers You
choose one of the six courses offered —choose the
cityjn which you want to work.
Since 1970 The Institute for Paralegal Training
has p.aced more than 700 graduates in law firms,
banks and corporations in over 60 cities
If you are a student of high academic standing and
are interested in a career as a Lawyer's Assistant,
we d like to meet you
Contact your placement office for an interview |With
■ our representative
We will visit your campus on
TUESDAY, FEBRUARY 18
i
* The Institute for .
Paralegal Training r
235 Souih 1 Sff.-Mi PMadeiphia P#»nnsy , wima 19*03
(21 5i 732-6600
£"? F
★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★
* After 149 Years $
£ There’s finally something
new in College Rings J
* *
C AURALITE
Gold rings that weigh
less and cost less
but are still real gold!
C PALLADIUM
precious metals that
-are riot gold, but
still precious.
REPOUSSE and
PRISMATITE
The use of new
engineering
innovations.
Balfour has something
new in class rings
We invite you to stop by
the store*
starting February 10th
and see something new
in college rings.
Be sure and register for our $
first of four drawings} We’ll J
be giving away a free class
ring each week during the
month of February.
RBdhur I
326 E. College Aye.
*
*
*
X
X
X
X
X
X
★★★★★
eight suspects were arrested.
“There is a very low leyel of
livelihood that this may have
been a terrorist act,’’ said
Natanya police commander
Kalman Bornstein.
another incident,
national police said a bomb
blew up under a parked
automobile in Jerusalem at 4
p.m., causing slight damage
to the' vehicle.
Vietnamese ex-president
demands end to Thieu regime
SAIGON (UPI) A former South Viet
namese chief of state called for the ouster of
President Nguyen Van Thieu yesterday at a
lunar New Year lawn party for opposition
leaders.
Retired Lt. Gen. Duong Van “Big” Minh,
who was chief of state 10 years ago and lost to
Thieu in the last elections, told dozens of anti
government Buddhist, Catholic and political
leaders :
“Either the tyrannical government'must
step back to .let the people advance in
freedom, democracy and establish the
political stuctures necessary for national
reconciliation and concord, or everything
will collapse.” j
Minh had called the gathering to mark the
impending end of the Year of the Tiger. On
the Vietnamese calendar, the Year of the Cat
starts next week.
Minh also said a recent crackdown on
Vietnamese journalists was “an act of
« SUMMER CAMP JOBS
yg Counseling Positions for Men tT
Camp Conrad Weiser, Wernersville, Pa. yu
Program Areas Aquatics, TraU Camping, *?
If . Canoeing, Music (piano & trumpet), crafts, 3r»
riding, Indian lore, general counseling W
’ Interviewing prospects on Sat., Feb. 8
CONTACT: Student Employment Office, 105
Boucke Bldg, for interview appointment.
PA. NORML / PSORML PRESENT:
MARIJUANA
DECRIMINALIZATION WEEK Feb. 3-9
basement Information Table or The
Lazy J or see the Collegian ads.
the Geneva peace conference
following a three-day visit by
Soviet Foreign Minister
Andrei Gromyko.
Senior Egyptian officials
said the word “immediate”
should not be taken too
literally. They said they still
welcomed Secretary of State
Henry Kissinger’s attempt to
arrange a second-stage
Israeli'withdrawal from Sinai
and the Golan Heights.
The Popular Struggle Front
said' the Natanya attack
contempt against the people” of Vietnam and
of the world.
The Thieu government’s press crackdown
also drew fire from the Communists. Hahoi
radio broadcast an editorial by the Com
munist party newspaper “People’s Daily”
calling the arresl! of 19 Saigon journalists
“repression of the press.”
In neighboring Cambodia, 50 pro-
Communist Khmer rebels infiltrated the
Prey Sala village skirting Phnom Penh’s
Pochentong airport during the night, but were
driven out by peasants fighting back with
household military sources said.
In South Vietnam, official figures show 169
Communist troops were killed during the 24
hours ending at dawn yesterday in 86 cease
fire violations. Government losses were put
at 36 killed and 164 wounded.
- At least 90 Communists were killed in
government air strikes near a district town in
Quang Ngai province.
coincided with another
guerrilla, attack on the old
shipping section of the north
Israel town of Tiberias, where
it said fire bombs exploded at
milinight starting “huge fires
anti causing great material
damage.”
College of Science
Student Council
Meeting tonight
<£:00 in 109 Boucke
Hoagies, Hoagies
Hoagies
CATTLE CAR
Next to Train Station
or Call: 234-1459, 237-0296
or write: P. 0.8. 85
Stale College, Pa. 16801
Organizations combine
to combat world hunger
A new group met last night
to coordinate the activities of
local organizations which are
trying to raise funds for.the
world’s starving millions.
Undergraduate Student
Government Vice President
Jim Maza, who called the
meeting at the HUB, said,
“We can act as a catalyst to
get things going.”
Philip Corrado, chairman
of one of the local groups, the
Citizens’ Action 'Committee,
called the food problem “the
most significant problem in
the world.”
About 20 persons attended
the meeting. The group
adopted no name or formal
organization.
Also attending the meeting
were, members of the Com
munity Hunger Appeal of
Church World Service and
Bread for the World.
Corrado and Maza agreed
that political and religious
disagreements should not be
allowed to obstruct what
Maza called “projects to
raise public consciousness
and relief money.”
Corrado said that it would
be possible to raise money
through films or concerts,
and that musicians John
Denver and Harry Chapin
might be willing to perform at
GOOD SEATS
STILL AVAILABLE
PITTSBURGH
SYMPHONY
ORCHESTRA
i
SATURPAY, FEB. 8/
8:30 p.m., Univ. Audi
Donald Johanos •
conducting
• Mozart, Piano Concerto
No. 24; Philip Dettra,
pianist
• Copland, “Lincoln
Portrait;” William Warfield,
narrator
• Charles Ives, \
Symphony No. 2
TICKETS at Univ. Aud. or the
HUB. Hours 9 a.m. to 4 p.m.
weekdays, 10 to 12 Sat., or
at the door from 7:30 p.m. If
still available. Box office
865-2242. Phone orders
accepted on BankAmericard
or Master-Charge only.
$1.50-52.50-53.50 student/
Chil(J;s2.7s-$3.75-$4.75
general sale.
The Artist Series 865-1871,
Thursday Special
16”TuiiaSub only $l.BB
i regularly $2.13
16” Turkey Sub only $l.BB
regularly $2.18
-
Penn State for donations to
UNICEF.
He added that most of the
money collected by the
Citizens’ Action Committee
would be used outside the
United States, “because
that’s where the worst
situation is.”
The Citizens’ Action
Committee is “a non-political
Laurel Glen
to convene
Laurel Glen tenants will
meet Sunday to discuss
whether they want to renew
negotiations with the
management, a tenants’’
union organizer said
yesterday.
At the meeting, tenants
plan to ..decide whether to
negotiate, what demands
should be made and “whether
to have a rent strike if those
demands are not met,” union
organizer Jackie Greenfield
said.
“The possibilities are
many. None of us can express
the opinion of the tenants
without approval from other
tenants,” organizer Greg
McCarren said.
Union lawyer Alan Ellis
will discuss at the meeting
how to conduct a rent strike,
Greenfield said.
State College Housing
inspector James Pettingill
toured about nine Laurel Glen
apartments yesterday.
“I don’t care to comment on
the inspection until I meet
But does it have to be? not if
you do something about it. So
. the next time you see pollution
it s a crying shame point it out to someone who
can do something about it.
Pollution:
$750
J per month
Complete 4-month program
regularly $9.75 per month ‘
i€r I
Stop by and enter our drawing
on a portable T.V.!
Call 237-5701
to * r-
KL When a body needs a friend mtfjk l
(at a price any body can afford). IR!
Tv Elaine Powers IN
f Figure Salons 1\ :
323 R. E. Beaver Ave./ V !
organization with the sole
purpose of raising money for
the hungry through films,
concerts and donations,”
according to the Committee’s
charter.
The Committee and persons
who attended the meeting will
distribute literature and take
donations Monday in the
HUB. Corrado said.
tenants
Sunday
with Jhe manager of Laurel
Glen," Pettingill said. But he
said there were "a lot of
violations that were not
associated with the housing
codes, such as icy sidewalks
and icy roads."
The housing inspectors will
meet today with Resident
Manager Freeman Everett.
Greenfield said.
According to Greenfield,
the organizers will give
Everett a list of about 40
alleged housing code
violations and "wait for a
reasonable time for them to
be fixed.”
The management had
maintenance men plowing the
parking lot and shoveling
sidewalks yesterday.
.Greenfield said it appears
the new management at
Glen is making an
effort to improve conditions.
But the tenants do not know if
the improvement will con
tinue, she said, so "we want
this guaranteed in the con
tract.”