_ • The Daily Collegian Wednesday, March 26, 1975-3 ' a ; - PF I‘t IS 15AY A SLICE OF TgUFFLE 1 WOULDN'T KN0W...1 Lowering of fees may De ii_, A q TOP OF E 665 BENEDICT (5 INFINITELY SUPERIOR TO ROUND-HEADED KID NE' SERVES ME E 665 SENO lOa \ A SLICE .., • BLACK OLIVE F ., ~ , . ..,, unethical' for attorneys ,P 04,4,,,, ..,,,f......._ ......_.., . f • ,IL• , . ...42,0,..- - tr mg; 4p...A -- 1 WASHINGTON by Lewis H. and f Ruth S. Justice Lewis F. Powell Jr., hung up your shingle and - _ ( UPI l—The Supreme Court Goldfarbs, who paid $637.50 a Virginian, did not sit in the someone comes in and asked DOONESBURY was told yesterday that a for title insurance, a deed of case. for a divorce? How do you , lawyer takes a chance of trust anct other fiecessary Alan B. Morrison of know what to charger iVO/4 NEN, bl 5. OW being found unethical if he papers when they bought a Washington, who represented Morrison said -there is ...7/ . E 57 - 4 - 5 CAW ON TIE NION7 OF WIRVARY YEAH, YOU cuts his fees below suggested $54,000 home in Reston, Va. in the Goldfarbs, told the court nothing illegal about visiting - 70 THE STAVO RXIRTH, - AT APIWNWLY WM_ GOT IT R/6/17:f bar schedules. 1971. the Virginia State Bar was a few'attorneys and inquiring 4 MS. tizu 4opez 8:30 RM., YOU W E - 1.1.41.06 ar me CDT' E . .5.4 X 6/NNY, "The profession is a service The details of the fees "co-equal partner" in the as to the going rate for : AT prAthypffi -. Aith4/E MOWN &OLDEN ' CHECK_ 1 WHAT ThilEs and not "" a mere money squared in every respect with arrangement because of various services. . •/ e.. GATE PAPX, /5 711 AT . I OINNeR 71:01/6N7 2 making oc cupati on ," said mimimum schedules issued pdvisory opinions it issued in Virginia,. Attorney General e CORRECT? \ -.. . (. 4. , Lewis T. Booker of Rich- in 1969 by the county bar ' 1962 and 1969 as an ad- Andrew P. Miller said the , ri .*/ -iiiis., , it , ~ (0 , - ____,. 1111* ft ''' 4 . . a) ~; mond, who represented the association. They were ministrative agency of the Virginia Bar only did its duty ri e _. 1 I ...-- ) ---% f Fairfax County, Va. bar confirmed by 20 lawyers Virginia Supreme Court and by sending out reports on fees g - 0 I ,---, .i - --..: ~ i Ai r t association. whom the Goldfarbs con- ;the possibility that it could charged throughout the state ; \_.., / irr - i tacted. issue a sinjilar report and never =insisted that ! -.-, - • "tomorrow." . lawyers actually follow them. i.— r ----- ' 1 ^ " AIL — r—.,------rr 1111--- . _ ~.. Both bar groups are subject The court will hand down a.i • • • ,1 - *II 7 , • ;-- _ 11 -- 71 . r-- - 1 ------ 1 r to trebled damages under the written opinion on the case 1 1 I . 1 [ 7 r - u I , 1 i , , , 1 , Sherman law, he argued. sometime before the end of all. I I I 1_ I, . A b.:_ki b fru L__,l i a , -- the term in June. "I have great difficulty in finding a lower-than minimum fee unethical," Justice Thurgood Marshall said at one point. Booker argued to an eight judge court that cutting fees would be permissible in some instances but not in order to advertise. The setting of fee schedules by bar groups was challenged SEPTA strikers ratify Philadelphia contract PHILADELPHIA (AP I—Transit $6.38. It includes a 60-cent immediate workers yesterday approved a . new ° hourly raise, 15 cents more on Dec. 15, and 'contract, ending an 11-day steike that another 35 cents next March 15 forced 400,000 commuters in the nation's •fourth-largest city to scramble for other ways to work The vote was 2,704 in favor of the new two-year contract and 2,052 against, ac cording to Local 234 of the Transport Workers Union. - Ned LeDonne, president of Local 234, said the workers would return to work immediately and said he hoped subway, bus and trolley service would be back to normal "within a few hours." . Voting was conducted all day yesterday at a dozen locations in the city. All but one of the local polling places reported ap proval. LeDorme said. The workers struck the Southeastern Pennsylvania Transportation Authority March 15 after no agreement could be reached on a new contract. The contract approved yesterday gives SEPTA operators a $l.lO hourly increase over the next two years—from $5,28 to Lunch ceiling rejected WASHINGTON ( UPI )—The House voted tentatively yes terday to reject a proposal to place a government guaranteed ceiling on the price of hot lunches for every child in the nation, regardless of income. Faced with almost certain defeat of their original proposal to place the ceiling at' 25 cents per lunch, Democratic sponsors of the bill decided earlier yesterday to set the ceiling at 35 cents, reducing its cost to the federal government. But . the House adopted an amendment by Rep. William F. Goodling, R-Pa., who was a school superintendent until he came to Congress this year. His amendment eliminated any proposed changes in the current program which offers free or reduced-price lunches to childten of low-income parents. LUTHER HOUSE 229 S. Garner Faith & Life Community A coed community for exploring the making of Christian - Corndiunity. pplications available for 75-76 school year at 210 Eisenhower Chapel 865-0033 Sponsored by Lutheran Student Parish MON .•.,,111.,..10...111/...•••• The case presents the justices with their first chance to decide whether the Sherman anti-trust law ap plies to the "learned professions." Booker said these groups have traditionally been confined to "medicine, law and the divinity." The SEPTA board approved the con tract last weekend after prodding from Gov. Milton Shapp and Mayor Frank Rizzo, but the union refused t'b order its members back to work pending the ratification vote. The union refused to go back to work because the SEPTA board originally said it . would pay the increased wages only if the state and city came up with the $l3 million the settlement would cost. But the hoard later approved the contract un conditionally. During the strike, the Penn Central and Reading railroads added extra trains to their commuter lines which serve area suburbs. Those trains were jammed each weekday, as were city streets when thousinds of commuters were forced to drive. Following the vote, the Penn Central announced it would return to its regular schedule and the Reading was expected to do the same. BASXIH-ROBBINS IC: CREAM STORE ICE CREAM EASTER EGGS '• 368 E. COLLIDE AVE Chief Justice Warren E. Burger suggested that the schedules might prevent undue fee cutting with resulting shoddy work. Justice William A. Rehnquist asked: "Suppose you just • • • 0 • * $ 1.35 $ 3.25 $ 4.50 Kidnapers' demands to be met NAIROBI ( UPI )—France agreed yesterday to meet all the demands of nationalist gunmen who kidnaped the French ambassador to Somalia and held him hostage for three days. The decision came within minutes of the guerrillas' deadline for the diplomat's execution. "The government has 'Dirt' plans USG monarchy, draws on grass roots support In the spirit of •Hashman, Oz and Steve Shelmire, Mike "Dirt" Bahry (Bth-business logistics) has beedme the seventh candidate for Undergraduate Student Government president. Running with Kim Turnbull (6th-civil engineering), Bahry has promised that if elected, he will declare himself king. "It's obvious that democracy hasn't worked out so I think we should try a monarchy," he said last week. Once Bahry is crowned, he said he will name Turnbull "head minister." They initially decided Bahry should head the government, according to Turnbull, "because he was wearing the Burger King hat at the-time," "Our platform is two by two by two by, 1.265 and made of cardboard," Bahry said, "`but not insane." Asked if he and Turnbull would be concentrating their campaign efforts in a "Environment and Behavior", Dr. Art Patterson, Assistant Professor Man-Environment Relations Penn State University :.,:.n.y., m Colloquy Workshop Wednesday,, March 26 1:00 p.m. Kern Assembly Room lOKAK,SNOOPY, 'FOUR ..108 IS TO SNIFF THEY SAY A SLICE OF TRUFFLE wOuLPN'T KNOW...THAT 1 NOWMAT WE'RE r THEM OLIT...I'LL 'EM UP ON TOP OF €665 BENECNCT ROUND-HEADED KID NEVER LOOKING FOR (S INFINITELY SUPERIOR TO SEINES ME €665 BENEOICTi CARE TRUFFLES I F A SLICE • E3LACK OLIVE 411 P • & tea` I "/' %%AA agreed to everything and I the Somali Coast, had have just spoken to my demanded the release of tivo husband," Mrs. Jean Gueury, colleagues jailed in France, a wife of Ambassador Jean $lOO,OOO ransom in gold bars Gueury, said in a telephone and a plane to take them to interview from the Somali Aden in South Yemen. The capital of Mogadishu. "Of kidnapers originally course, lam now feeling full demanded that the am of hope." bassador accompany them to The kidnapers, members of Aden but it was unclear if he the Front for the Liberation of would do so. specific geographic area, Bahry said, "Yeah, in the twilight zone." The ',r haVe some - _ propoL student life more fun, including: —a blimp service from campus to the Nittany Mall and one going to Stone Valley and Whipple's Dam. Also a special weekend blimp will travel between Parking Lot 80 and the downtown bar area. —the conversion of South Halls into a zoo. "That's obviously the most logical place to do it. There's already a monkey house oethe north end," Bahry said. —blodking completion of the middle sec tion of the State College bypass and turning the area into a "natural recreation park." Bahry said he has considerable grass roots support and will run his campaign with small unsolicited Contributions "So far about 30 peq4e have given money. - That's how we bOught ob. magic market." ti Ik_s ic:::::::=3 , ==43c=4=oc===xl=ll ; sals for makini ***************************************v * A NICE PLACE TO MEET FRIENDS * * * * * A GOOD PLACE TO EAT * * . * * * * * a 42/ HUB aitKaitif2) * * * ** * * * * OPEN TO ALL DAILY * * * * LUNCH DINNER * * 11:30 a.m. - 1:15 P.m. 5:00 p.m. - 6:45 p.m. * * Choose from hamburger to gourmet entrees * * * * , at a wide range of prices to fit your budget * * * ***************************************** A UNIVERSITY CALENDAR Alard String Quartet, 8:30 p.m., Music Bldg. recital hall. Colloquy Panel discussion on "Population," 7:30 p.m., HUB main lounge, with Drs. Gordon De Jong, Alvin R. Grove, Ke Chung Kim, and Wilbur Zelinsky. Colloquy Workshop, "Environment and Behavior," with Dr. Art Patterson, Man- Environment 4telations, 1 p.m., Room 112 Kern. "Noondays" devotional service, 12 noon, Eisenhower Chapel. The Rev. Irmgart Soltau. • FSHA 410 dinner, "Ancient Babylon," 5:30 p.m., Maple Room, HUman Development Reservations required, 865-7441. Biochemistry . , 4 p.m., Room 101 Althouse. Dr. Leslie P. Kozak, Jackson Lab., Bar Harbor Maine, on "Embryonic and Adult Isozyme Forms: Molecular Probes of Differentiation." USG Academic Assembly, 7:30 p.m., Room 351 Willard Museum of Art Works by Will Barnet, Gallery A. Selections from the Permanent Collection, Gallery B. Lee Krasner, Collages and Works on Paper, Gallery C. Zoller Gallery "Invisions 1975" faculty-student portfolio. Eadweard Muybridge, a traveling exhibition. HUB Gallery Ground floor, multimedia exhibit of Renascence Gallery crafts and art Works, sponsored by HUB 'Arts and Crafts Committee, until March 30. "Original Posters of the 1890's" French Embassy Exhibit. Pattee Library American Women Writers, 1600 to present. Photographs, "Faces of Prague," by Cynthia Begnal. Chambers Gallery Peter Calaboyias, sculpture, Howard Lieberman, graphics. Photography Gallery, 212 A Arts Biclg. Walker Evans Portfolio. Kern Gallery Prints by graduate students Paul Harcharik, Kurt Warnke, and Charles Moore. Ceramics by. 21 members of the Art Alliance Potters Guild. Photography,by students in the Department of Journalism. Pollock Lounge'— Jewelry and ceramics. Hammond Gallery Abstract oils and acrylics by Mary Ann Keithan, graduate student in art. Sackett Gallery In Paris, a spokesman for the Elysee Palace said the government's capitulation was intended to save the 57- year-old diplomat's life." Government officials said the two jailed nationalists, Omar Osman Rabeh and Omar Elmi Kaireh, will be released shortly from their respective jails in Muret in central France, and Caen, Normandy. Both were ser ving life terms for political assassination attempts in the Somail-inhabited French territory of the Afars, and h (=lC===XlC===)(ii==XK===4K===4 Catholic Holy Week Services Holy Thursday Mass: 4:30 p.m. University 11 Auditorium Good Friday Liturgy: 4:30 p.m. UniVersity ' Auditorium Saturday Easter Vigil: 8:00 p.m. Eisenhower 11 Chapel Easter Sunday Masses: 7:00 a.m. Eisenhower Chapel 9:30, 11:00 University Auditorium 4:15 p.m. Forum , " Sacrament of Penance: Wednesday, Thursday, - and Friday, 10:00 a.m. - 12:00 Eisohower Chapel Thursday anol r Friday, 2:00 - 4:00 p.m. University Auditorium Saturday, 4:00 - 5:00 p.m. Eisenhower Chapel Wednesday, March 26, 1975 SPECIAL EVENTS SEMINARS MEETING EXHIBITS "Movement," projects by architecture students Issas, which adjoins Somalia on the horn of east Africa. Mrs. Gueury said her husband's spirits "obviously have picked up since he learned the news. Both of us are quite confident now everything will be all right." The Paris government sent Jean Desparmet. French ambassador to Somalia before Gueury, to Mogadishu early Tuesday to open negotiations with the kid napers:
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers