— The Daily Collegian Tuesday, April 6, 1976 Court upholds Calley decision Gordon said Monday's court ruling was the end of court efforts for Calley. Calley has been free since his conviction was overturned on Sept. 25, 1974 by U.S. District Judge J. Robert Elliott of Columbia, in a decision later reversed by the Circuit Court. Calley was originally sentenced to a life term for the murders. committed at My Lai, which occurred during an infantry sweep through the Vietnamese hamlet in March 1968. Subsequent appeals reduced the term to 10 years 25 , *************************l _ 25' I : - COUPON GOOD ON ANY MACHINE cif WASHINGTON (AP) Former Army Lt. William L. Calley, convicted of mur dering at least 22 Vietnamese villagers at My Lai in 1968, lost his appeal to the Supreme Court yesterday but 'will remain a free man. Giving no reason, the court declined to review a decision of the U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals in New Orleans reinstating Calley's 1971 court-martial conviction. Calley, 32, who has been free on bail in Columbia, Ga., was reported en route to Spokane, Wash., to make a speech. C 0 MATIME U.0.A... P * 0 * N 0t * Valid on Tuesday, April 6 N I ONE PER PERSON Gl*************************lltl informal come anytime leave anytime LIBERAL ARTS CAREER DAY Thurs., April 8, HUB Morning Law Career Forum 9:30 to Noon, HUB Assembly Room Alumni lawyers and law students will answer questions about law study and careers. Health Professions Forum 9:30 to Noon, HUB Main Lounge Alumni physicians, dentists, and medical students will answer questions about medical study and careers. Afternoon , Career Information Program 2:15 to 5:15,pm, HUB Ballroom More than 40 alumni from the eastern U.S. are returning to campus to share their experiences in: + Business and Management + Education + Advertising and Sales + Public and Industrial Relations + Journalism and + Government Service Broadcasting + Law , + Banking , + Health Professions + Transportation + Social Services + Plus Many Others , International Affairs Careers 3 to 5 pm, HUB Main Lounge Foreign service officers and faculty will discuss careers in international business, government, education, etc. sponsored by College of Liberal Arts Alumni Society Liberal Arts Student Council The words of St. Mary Mazzarello, co-foundress of the Institute of the Daughters of Mary Help of Christians (Salesian Sisters). St. John Bosco founded the Institute as a living monument of gratitude to the Mother of God. Dedicated at their founding to Christian education of young girls, today the Salesian Sisters are located in 60 countries around the world. The works of the Salesian Sisters, both educative and missionary, include all types of schools, dispensaries, hospitals„ catechesis, youth and parish For more information about the Salesian Sisters clip and send this coupon to Sister Josephine Carini, F.M A. Vocation Office 655 Belmont Avenue Haledon, New Jersey 07508 ADDRESS PHONE , His lawyer, J.J. Houston Gordon of Covington, Tenn., said in a telephone interview that the Army had assured him Calley "will be placed upon parole and will continue to live the life that he is presently living. • Calley will be placed on parole, the Army said. He had served all but 10 days of the one-third minimum of his 10. year sentence when a federal judge ordered him released on bail Nov. 9, 1974. He had spent those three years under house arrest at Ft. Benning, Ga. . activities ___ EDUCATION before he was freed on bail He told the Supreme Court he was denied a fair trial because of "worldwide and all-pervasive" publicity in which he was "labeled . . . as a ghoul who had wantonly massacred hundreds of in nocent civilians." He also argued that Congress should have been compelled to let his lawyers examine confidential data compiled by My Lai in vestigating committee. In other action, the Supreme Court ruled six to two that police departments may prohibit their officers from wearing long hair and beards. The justices said such regulations are - justified by the need to make policemen identifiable . The court accepted several cases for argument next fall. One of them involves a record-breaking $36 million judgment awarded to Chriscraft Industries under federal securities laws after a bitter battle for ,control of Piper Aircraft Corp. in 1969. In another, the justices will consider whether a state may prevent a neighboring state from dumping garbage within its borders. Knupp Optical is relocE. ed at 254 E. Beaver Ave. State College 237-1382 O't U* SAVE 23% ON Scotch C-00 MASTER" CASSETTE IN $5.68* value •IManulacturcr s Suggested List Price) now only $3.25 Beginning January 1, 1976 ... and as long at supplies last, you save 23% when you purchase the new "Scotch" Master"' cassette, packaged it the "C -Box" storage container ... in addition, yot receive an empty "C -Box" FREE. You're saving twice ... and on two outstanding items The new Master"' Cassette features a higt output:low noise, ferric oxide coating that perform: so super it boosts the Master"' cassette into sec( place in the "Scotch" line ... lust behind the rent CLASSIC cassette. The "C -Box" is truly a revoi plastic storage container, featuring pushbutton grooves for interlocking storage. 1 1 ..-...! ..eG"'" 1 ....-- 1. Each C.Box grooved for P' r " ! 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Shapp said he talked only once with a Mellon official this year, in a phone con versation, and could provide corroboration that he made no such offer. Two persons were with the governor during the call to James Higgins, Mellon board chairman, Shapp said at a news conference yesterday. One of the two was Walter Arader, a member of the board of the Pennsylvania Housing Finance Agency, which needed the loan to 5 1 111 :0 1 YO3 , PRESENTS , . Tonite: DISCO Tomorrow, Friday and Saturday _ Beaver Bros. Band (Audio Lighted Dance Floor) 212 Calder Alley A LIMITED SUPPLY, DOUBLE SAVE OFFER* RECEIVE FREE EMPTY "C -BOX" LIST: 55.75 SALE. 53.99 212-R9O OPEN REEL TAPE SCHOOLKIDS' Records 323 E. Beaver Ave. $6.98 List for $3.99 (Regular price) PLUS OUTSTANDING SAVINGS AND PRODUCTS Scotch LOW N OISE D YNARANGE 8-T RACK CART.,Oc, IMEIZE avoid defaulting. Contacted at his Philadelphia office, Arader said he hadn't listened to all of what Shapp had said during the call. "I made no attempt to listen to what the governor was saying," Arader said. He said he listened with only "half an ear" and felt it improper to eavesdrop on the governor's call. He suggested that a reporter get corroboration from the governor's aides. David Brown, Shapp's financial assistant, who was the other person Shapp said was present, could not be reached immediately for comment. After seeing Arader's remarks on the Associated Press wire, Shapp set up a conference call with himself, Arader, and the AP. "I did hear a substantial part of the conversation 'and what I heard did not remotely approach blackmail," Arader said in the second con versation. Shapp then said his counsel, "C -BOX" MINUTES Larry Beaser, was also present when the call was made. Shapp said he had forgotten about Beaser's presence when he met with the press earlier. Beaser said he heard all of the conversation, except for the first minute or so. There was no offer made, Beaser said. A bank source made the charge in a Pittsburgh newspaper story Sunday. Charles Jarrett, Mellon vice president, affirmed the ac count in an interview. But Jarrett has refused several times to elaborate. "We have no fuither' comment at this time because , we believe these matters should be settled by, the courts," the bank said in a statement yesterday. The bank source said in the Sunday story that Shapp told a bank official he was willing to drop planned legal action stemming from a state in vestigation into Mellon's trusteeship of state bond money and retirement funds. UNIVERSITY CALENDAR Commons Videotape, Jazz, noon Kern lobby. Sports: Men's tennis, vs. Georgetown, 2:30 p.m. Delta Phi Alpha annual banquet, 6:30 p.m., Hotel State College. Dr. Leslie Willson, chairman, Department of German, University of Texas, on "Arrivals and Departures: The Worlds of Heinrich Boll." Seminar on Psychology Reference Materials, 7 p.m.,•Room WllO Pattee. University Readers, "Poetry and Jazz," 8 p.m., Room 112 Kern. SEMINARS . Analytical Chemistry, 12:45 p.m., Room 445 Divey. G. J. Rosenberger on "Analytical -- Techniques Used in Activation Analysis." Solid State Physics, Ip.m.,Room 339 Davey. R. Meyerson on "Dynamics of Sym metry Breaking Long ange Order in Ferromagnetic Films." Solid Waste, 2:20 p.m., Room 140 Fenske. Walter Malby, Resource Recovery Group, ALCOA, Pittsburgh; on "Resource Recovery in the Aluminum Industry." Social and Behavioral Sciences, 3:50 p.m., Room S-130 Henderson Human • Development. Dr. Gaky Stollak, psychology, Michigan State University, on "NIMH Sponsored Research Program for the Identification of and Intervention for, High Risk Families." Engineering Mechanics, 4 p.m., Room 232 Hammond. Dr. D. J. Patel, National Heart and Lung Institute, Bethesda, Md., on "The Role of Hemodynamics in Atherosclerosis." Dr. Thomas Hoskins, Quaker Service worker, on "Vietnam since the American With drawal," 3:30 p.m., HUB auditorium. Sponsored by the Southeast Asia Studies Committee and Colloquy. Free U, 7 p.m., Room 319 RUB. Engineering Undergraduate Council, 7:30 p.m., Room 207 Sackett EXHIBITS Museum of Art: Recent Works by Stuart Frost. • Zoller Gallery: Invisions, until Aprillo. Kern Gallery: R. Logan Harrison, photography, until April 9. W. C. Handy Jazz Exhibit, until April 9. American Evolution in the Arts. Chambers Gallery: African Art, opening April 10. Art Alliance Invitational Exhibit, all media. HUB ( Main Lounge) : Americana in the Netherlands (Royal Netherlands Infor mation Embassy), until April 9. Suiting Everyone (Smithsonian Institution Traveling Exhibition Service), opening April 7. .At The time, Mellon was part of a consortium of banks negotiating with the state for the $6l million housing agency loan. The negotiations broke down and the state agency was saved from bankruptcy with an emergency state appropriation. Last week, t Shapp con vinced the board of twp state schoolbuilding authorities to State roadwork cut . HARRISBURG (AP) A measure designed to reduce unnecessary highway . con struction , contracts was ap proved yesterday by the House. , The provision was part of an $86.5 million supplemental• spending package for the Transportation Department, to be used .during the current fiscal year. , Presently, PennDOT has a relatively free hand in award ing contracts to private en gineering or construction Tuesday, April 6, 1976 SPECIAL EVENTS LECTURES MEETINGS authorize legal action againsl, Mellon. The suit would seek $6 million in damages. A report, based on a year long investigation, charged the bank mishaMiled : the' authorities' billion_ dollar account and cost the'state at least $3.1 million in' lost in terest. The - state', seeks an additional $2.8 million in damages firms. Critics haye, said some contracts are given even though PennDOT Onployes are available to - 49 the work, and are awarded as political favors. An amendment to.the spend ing bill would.. rcqUire the transportation secretary to contact each of PennDOT's -11 district, engineers in, writing, asking ,whether the engineer had employes avail able for a particular proposed highway contract. , '