New PSU card section to cheer Nittany Lions About 100 students will show their true colors tomorrow when a new "card section" play's its first hand at the Penn State-North Carolina State football game. According to cheer leading mike-man Don Mains, the group. called "Block-S," will sit in sec tion NF at the stadium, behind the freshmen. W'e'd like to give them better seats," Mains said, "but it's late and the game this weekend will be crowded." He added that the group is about 50 per Colony building military By L PI Guatamala denounced the British military build-up in neighbOring Belize yesterday and said it was prepared to "meet force with force' if necessary to back its territorial claims to the tiny Central American colony. Britain warned it would fight back if Guatamala attacked. Guatemala was reprted to have massed troops along the Belize border and to have placed its air force which includes a number of Israeli-supplied "Arava" troop carrying transports plus a squadron of ground-attack aircraft capable of bombing runs in a state of alert. It also reportedly sent at least 12 armed patrol boats off the Belize Caribbean coast. Dispatches from Belize City indicated the build-up of British troops, which began Wednesday with units from the Devon and Dorset regiments, was continuing. They said troops and military equipment were pouring aboard an airlift of Royal Air Force planes including big Cl3O Hercules and Canberra ransports. Guatemalan President Kjell Laugerud House at odds WASHINGTON (UPI) A tax revision bill, including a ~ ear's extension of current tax cuts, ran into more rouble yesterday as Democrats squabbled over 'nether to allow liberalizing amendments on the House floor and Republicans vowed to fight to the end ;for President Ford's $395 billion spending ceiling. A House Ways and Means Committee afternoon meeting, calling for a final ote on the bill, was rescheduled for this afternoon as committee Democrats met behind closed doors to try to iron out their differences. l o and ii I t/ / i / i i i , CheairMA 155 5 1 a0 e cent freshmen. Each student in Block-S will hold blue, white, red and gold cards. Instruction sheets will be provided to designate which color card to flash for each design. Instructions will vary, depending on where each person is sitting. The designs, devised on a computer, will include a red and gold checkerboard, the letters "PSU", and other slogans spelled out one letter at a time. According to Mains, the designs are limited because of the small size of over tax bill Liberals such as Reps. Abner Mikva, D-111., and William Green, D-Pa., demanded that the bill be sent to the floor under procedures that would allow them to offer amendments to reverse several committee decisions to water down the "reform" section of the bill. They said they might ap peal to the Caucus of all House Democrats if the committee does not agree with them. Conservatives, led by Rep. Joe Waggonner, D-La., want some procedure that would block or limit the liberalizing amendments. rs` A • / ( /// the card section. "We need 200 people to spell out a big `PSU' or a lion's head," he said. Mains said the last card section at Penn State had about 400 students but it broke up in 1970. "If this one works well, we might be able to make it per manent," Mains said. Any student interested in being a part of this week's card section should meet at 11:30 Saturday morning in front of Sheilds building for a practice session. A student ticket is needed to enter the stadium. Garcia, denouncing the British troop build-up defended this nation's territorial claims to that British colony yesterday and warned London that Guatemala is ready "to meet force with force," if necessary. Garcia said "Belize is an American hemisphere problem" and expressed con fidence that Guatemala's position already backed by fellow Central American republics would be supported by all other Latin nations. Guatemalan Foreign Minister Adolfo Molina Orante said that the British military buildup "is viewed as an aggression." Guatemala's centuries-old claims to Belize as its own national territory are contained in the Guatemalan constitution. In London, Foreign Secretary James Callaghan said he had warned Guatemala that Britain would defend Belize against an invasion. In the United Nations, 44 nations joined Britain in sponsoring a resolution supporting Belize's right of self-determination and calling for direct negotiations among Britain, Guatemala and the Belize. Adding another com plication, Republicans voted in a closed causus to fight to the end to attach Ford's spending ceiling to the tax cut. There would be no compromises, they said. Committee chairman Ai Ullman, D-Ore., is reported to have the votes to narrowly approve the final bill, but he hopes to avoid a divisive floor fight through compromise between Democratic factions. The major section of the bill would extend the current tax cuts for both individuals and business scheduled to expire Jan. 1 into next year. iillpor.l I 1„,//, / L./ ic aliS j ies:: - freiWlLe/ den-irn Tor,T_Lt E corriTut:3) (pep. 10:3Dtb 9:30 mon_ . 1p to NSA cable readings revealed WASHINGTON (UPI) U.S. intelligence agents read foreign cable traffic to and from U.S. citizens and firms on a wholesale basis for decades until last May,. a Senate report alleged yesterday. Contradicting the testimony of intelligence officials, the Senate Intelligence Committee said the National Security Agency checked most overseas telegraph traffic from the early postwar years until just six months ago in a secret operation apparently unknown to any president since Harry S. Truman. "Of all the messages made available to NSA each year, it is estimated that NSA in recent years selected about 150,000 messages a month for NSA analysts to review," the committee said in its report on the secret electronic eavesdropping agency. "Thousands of these messages, in one form or O : ENDS THIS WEEK SUNSHINE'S HAPPY BIRTHDAY SALE EVERYTHING 10% OFF 15% OFF all corduroy skirts, shirts, pants 15% OFF all suits and sets (FREEBEE with every $35.00 purchase) SUNSHINE imported clothing - handcrafts , • . 220 S. Fraser Z eopoo a (across from the Post Office) . • • / 3 e 4 attY.liti ClOtleiS ! ' SL. _ 11 \- - - S s i A :the .21ete, chzn. another, were distributed to other agencies in response to `foreign intelligence requirements.'" The report said the sur veillance . project known as "Operation Shamrock," had no legal bags, and Defense Secretary James Schlesinger fired by President Ford last weekend over unrelated issues ordered it stopped on May 15. In other developments related to congressional in vestigation of intelligence operations: • CIA director William Colby, also fired last weekend, testified before the Senate Foreign Relations and House Intelligence com mittees on various subjects only one day after Ford persuaded him to stay temporarily on the job. The House Intelligence Committee voted to issue seven more subpoenas for intelligence documents, in cluding four addressed to Secretary of State Henry A. Kissinger. Kissinger backed the committee down in another subpoena battle recently, forcing it to accept a compromise, and seemed likely to resist its new request for assessments of Soviet compliance with nuclear arms limitation agreements. Attorney General Edward Levi urged the Senate Intelligence Com mittee to permit continued "national security" wiretaps and bugging without court warrant. Levi said it would be dangerous to lay sensitive espionage' requirements UNIVERSITY CALENDAR Friday- Sunday, November 7-9, 1975 Friday, Nov. 7 Ag Hill Festival, 6:30 p.m., HUB ballroom. Annual get-together for ag students and faculty. Square dance, 9 p.m. Commons silent film, "Phantom of the Opera," 7 p.m., Room 112 Kern. Sports: Soccer, vs. Temple, 7 p.m., Jeffrey Field. Folk and Square Dance Roundup, 7:30 p.m., White Bldg. GSA's Commonsplace Coffeehouse, 8 p.m., Room 102 Kern. University Theatre, "The Caucasian Chalk Circle," 8 p.m., Playhouse Theatre. Le Treteau de Paris, "Phedre," 8 p.m., Schwab. Presented by the Department of French. Student performance of music by Bach, 8:30 p.m., Music Bldg. recital hall. Colloquy program, 9:30 p.m., University Auditorium. Ellen Burstyn, actress Saturday, Nov. 8 Sports: Lady Lion Cross Country Classic. Football, vs. North Carolina State, 1:30 p.m., Beaver Stadium. Hetzel Union Board Annual Jammy, 8 p.m., HUB ballroom. University Theatre, "The Caucasian Chalk Circle, 8 p.m., Playhouse Theatre Rock Jammy, featuring rock group "Fusion," 9 p.m., Findlay Rec Room. Sunday, Nov. 9 PSOC Hiking Club, exploration on Short Mountain between Little Juniata and Frankstown Branch, 9 a.m. Chapel Service, 11 a.m., Music Bldg. recital hall. Joseph Rhodes Jr., State Legislature Representative, member, Board of Trustees. Black Christian Fellowship worship service, 11 a.m., Black Cultural Center. Rev David Minor, Pastor, The Gospel Assembly, Coudersport, Pa Friday-Sunday, Nov. 7-9 "Day of the Dolphin," 7:30 and 10 p.m., Room 102 Forum. "Frankenstein," Andy Warhol, 7:30 and 10 p.m.., Findlay Rec Room "Thunderbolt and Lightfoot," 7:30 and 10 p.m., 105 Forum. "S-1 3 -Y-S," 7:30 and 10 p.m., Pollock Rec Room. "American Graffiti," 7:30 and 10 p.m., Redifer Room D. MUSEUM OF ART: 200 Years of Royal Copenhagen Porcelain. Architectural and Ornamental Drawings: Juvarra, Vanvitelli, the Bibiena Family, and Other Italian Draughtsmen, opening Nov. 9. Drawings from the Permanent Collection. HUB Gallery: U.N. Exhibit. Multi-media exhibit on women. KERN GALLERY: Renascence Gallery Exhibit, Live-in-Art, through Nov. 8. Wendy Snetsinger, photography ZOLLER GALLERY: TWo man show: Zoretich and Rubello. CHAMBERS GALLERY: Art Department student group show. Gold and Silver by students of SUNY at New Paltz. CULTURAL CENTER, Walnut Bldg.: An exhibit of mixed media, the work of the Pittsburgh Chapter of the National Conference of Artists. PATTEE LIBRARY: Exhibit of crafts, main lobby. Drawings by Denise Faleski, lending services lobby. Drawings by Dr. Paul Edmonston. RITENOUR HEALTH CENTER: Undergraduate Art Education Show, sponsored by the student chapter of the National Art Education Association, through Nov 15. The Daily Collegian Friday, November 7,1975- before a judge because he might underestimate the security interest involved or might accidentally disclose secrets. Chairman Frank Church of the Senate Intelligence Committee read the seven page NSA report in open session before Levi testified. It conflicted sharply with the Oct. 29 testimony of the NSA director, Lt. Gen. Lew Allen, who said the project ran only six years, from 1967 to 1973, and involved the cable traffic of only 1,650 SPECIAL EVENTS FILM S EXHIBITS Americans and 5,000 foreigners. Allen also suggested U.S. Presidents, including Richard M. Nixon, knew about the operation. , The Senate report said it appeared no president since Truman had been informed of the project, which it said originated in World War H and became more extensive and sophisticated later. It said RCA Global Com munications, ITT World Communications and Western Union International gave NSA the messages.
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