The daily collegian. (University Park, Pa.) 1940-current, September 13, 1976, Image 3

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    Taverns
Council
topic
State College Municipal
Council tonight is scheduled
to again discuss proposals
; •that would require en
' lorcement of occupancy
limits in bars and taverns.
Council last month voted to
- amend the Building and Fire
Code Ordinances but referred
the matter to the Public
Safety Committee for further
study. The committee is to
present its recommendations
tonight on what are ac
ceptable occupancy limits
Bike safety program success
, Bicycle safety programs
initiated by Police Services
helped cut bike thefts 51 per
cent last term, according to
Neil Grey, Police Services
supervisor.
h . Grey said program
directors encourage bike
owners to register their bikes
and inscribe their social
security numbers on them so
that stolen bikes are more
easily identified. They also
advise bike owners on the
',most secure methods of
Farmers' beef
HARRISBURG (AP) Today's beef
prices aren't making either consumers or
Akattlemen in Pennsylvania happy.
The person who pays $2 or more for a slice
of meat probably has little nice to say about a
beef rancher who she figures must be salting
away the profits.
That makes the cattleman even unhappier.
As of last August, he was paid only about 36
„cents a pound for beef that was sold to you as
4 a $2 T-bone steak, the Pennsylvania Crop
Reporting Service said.
Beef raisers lost anywhere from $75 to $2OO
per head of cattle this year according to
government figures, but their low prices
never quite made it to the supermarket
shelves.
ONLY THE NEWSPAPER has
such a faithful following. You
can take it with you on vacs•
lion of save for reading when
you return. The news and fea
tures await ybur fancy.
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and how limits are to be
enforced.
The limits could mean
waiting in line to get into bars
and cover charges to com
pensate bar' owners for
reduced patronage.
Council also is to consider a
borough planning com
mission recommendation for
the construction of three
pedestrian nodes in downtown
State College.
The proposed nodes are
extended sidewalk areas
Where pedestrians may rest,
park- bicycles, dispose ,of
trash and find 'information
about thetown and bus
routes.. The , Centre Region
planning staff has been
working on the idea for
almost two years. -
First priority in the com
mission's recommendation is
for a pedestrian node in front
of the Garden Theatre on S:
Allen Street. Second priority
chaining and locking bikes, he
said.
Grey attributed the
reduction in bike thefts to the
Agriculture specialists call the problem the
farm-retail price gap, which increased 40 per
cent in three years. That means if the far
mer's price drops by $l, the price the con
sumer pays drops only 40 cents.
The rest goes for increases in labor and
transportation to take the beef from farm to
market.
"The farmer doesn't have flexibility," said
Robert Coleman of the Pennsylvania Cat
tlemen's Association. "He takes the beef to
market and gets a bid price ... which is
irrespective of the money he put into the
cattle. It isn't practical to refuse the bid and
take his cattle back home."
' JODON'S STABLES
• ,
Indoor Tack
Riding r ••>. • Shop
Hall
NOW ENROLLING FALL
Riding School Program
BEGINNER • INTERMEDIATE • ADVANCED
• Separate Classes for Children and Adults
• Morning Clatses for Housewives
Hunt Seat Equitation
1 . Phone 237-4364
is the 'front of the State
Theatre in the 100 block of W.
College Avenue and third
priority is for a node on South
Atherton ' Street at West
College Avenue.
Eighteen nodes in.all are to
be' constructed over a period
of - several years. The plan
ning commission recom
mends, that the municipality
-budget ,as much as ' $lO,OOO
yearly for construction of
nodes.
And Council is holding a
public hearing on the State
College Comprehensive Plan.
The plan, prepared by the
Centre Regional Planning
Commission, sets guidelines
for, future physical
development of the borough.
The five townships of the
Centre Region currently are
considering similar plans to
coordinate physical
development for the entire
Centre Region.
registration of more bikes
and the increased sur
veillance of bike racks by
Police Services. •
Grey said only a small
number of stolen bikes
usually are recovered. He
said he suspects there is a
bicycle theft ring in town
which accounts for this.
Bicycles can be registered
at no charge every Monday
through Friday at the kiosk in
the visitor's parking lot next
to the HUB.
prices
Attends kick-off of Wise campaign
Mondale's brother on campus
By JEFF HAWKES
Collegian Staff Writer
Helen Wise officially. kicked
off her campaign for the state
general assembly Friday
night with a reception at the
Faculty Club attended by
Mort Mondale, brother to
Jimmy Carter's running
mate, Senator Walter Mon
dale.
Both Mondale brothers are
friends of Wise and have
endorsed her candidacy for
the state legislature from the
77th district.
Walter Mondale, cam
paigning across the country
for the vice presidency, could
not attend the reception.
"Fritz (Walter Mondale) said
he will try to make it to Penn
State another time," Wise
said.
William Morton Mondale is
in Pennsylvania for a
leadership meeting of state
educational associations. At
Graduate student
University police said
Thomas Brown, a graduate
student, lost a portion of his
thumb yesterday while
working on a machine in the
Visual Arts building. He was
treated at the Mountainview
unit of the Centre Community
Hospital.
Two men were arraigned
Saturday before Bellefonte
District Magistrate Louise
Green on charges of breaking
into a camper' parked near
Beaver Stadium.
Police log
Russel J. Snyder and
Richard L. Mclntire, both of
State College, were taken to
Centre County jail and held in
lieu of $5OO bail each. -
Donald P. Guss, of Mif-
41, he is seven years younger
than Sen. Mondale.
He does not wear a "Grits
and Fritz" campaign button.
Nor has he not been ac
tively campaigning for his
brother. He has said he feels
to do so would be a conflict of
interest with his executive
staff position on the South
Dakota state educational
association.
"The vice presidency is an
imposing, critical job,"
Mondale said. "When you
realize that your brother
could be the Vice President,
you get a tremendous sense of
commitment for him.
"There is just so much I
want to do to help him," he
said. "I'm convinced that he
will be the vice president, but
it's very frustrating to have to
avoid a conflict of interest."
But by the end of this week
Mort may be free to cam
paign as much as he can. The
flintown, was arraigned
Saturday before Magistrate
Green and held in Centre
County jail in lieu of $lOO bail
for alleged drug law
violations, public intoxication
wants Schorr to reveal source
Panel
WASHINGTON (UPI)
The House Ethics Committee
this week ends five months of
asking 400 witnesses who
leaked an 'intelligence report
to CBS reporter Daniel
Schorr.
And, as a finale, the panel
subpoenaed Schorr himself
and three jouranlists
associated with the Village
Voice which published the
secret document last
February.
The odds are the truth will
never come out, although
Rep. John Flynt, D-N.Y.,
National Educational
Association for the first time
in its history is expected to
endorse a presidential can
didate.
The NEA officially
recommended its members
endorse the Carter-Mondale
ticket but the actual en
dorsement will not be known
until the 10,000 ballots from
NEA members are counted
this week.
Mort Mondale will be free
to campaign if the NEA en
dorses the Democrats.
When he learned his older
brother was on Carter's list of
possible running mates, Mort
loses thumb in mishap
and disorderly conduct
. Timothy Hoover, of New
Breighton, Was apprehended
and charged at Saturday with
drug law violations. He was
committee chairman,
claimed last week the panel
knows who leaked but cannot
prove it unless Schorr con
firms the name.
Schorr, suspended by CBS
with pay pending outcome of
the investigation, stated he
will not reveal his source even
SOlll ll
RING DAY
That's when the Art Carved representative will
SEPTEMBER 13, 14, 15 be here to help you select your college jewelry
9 a.m. - 4 p.m.
GROUND FLOOR HUB SAVE $5
when you pay in full.
College Jewelry by
World-famous for diamond
A RIO RVE D and wedding rings
The Daily Collegian Monday, September 13, 1976-
\e ct‘o
said he didn't believe Walter
would be chosen because of
the other "big names" on the
list.
But by convention time, "I
felt sure he was Carter's
choice," he said. And 20
minutes after Carter an
nounced his choice, Mort
Mondale was enroute from
Aberdeen, South Dakota, to
New York City to be with
Walter.
"When I saw Walter, he
was struck by a deep sense of
satisfaction, but even more
than that, he was aware of the
job ahead of him," Mondale
said.
held in lieu of $250 bail
Douglas Rice, of RD 1
Mercersburg, , was charged
with driving under the in
fluence of alcohol Saturday
if it means going to jail on a
contempt of Congress
citation.
"At this age (60) with a
young family, no person could
relish even the remote
possibility of having to go to
jail," he said.
The ethics panel for
Mort Mondale met Jimmy
Carter in November, 1975, at
the National Conference of
State Educational
Associations in Atlanta.
"Carter is an exceedingly
bright, confident, com
fortable man," Mondale said.
"The upcoming debates will
show this. Carter won't come
untied."
Likewise, Mort expects
Walter to debate well against
his Republican opponent, Sen.
Robert Dole. "Walter was an
excellent state attorney
general, he is an excellent
Democrat, and he will be an
excellent vice president," he
said.
Wise met Walter Mondale
in Washington, D.C., while
serving as vice president and
president of the NEA. She
testified at committee
hearings on behalf of
education legislation spon
sored by Sen. Mondale.
when he was stopped for
ignoring a traffic sign. He
was arraigned and
,held in
Centre County jail in lieu of
$5OO bail.
mally called the House
Committee on Standards of
Official Conduct last week
fruitlessly interrogated under
oath 16 former staffers of the
now defunct Intelligence
Committee in a public
hearing, and a 17th person in
closed session.
When the soot mole.
after a liii est rill•.
the ugly Year , begin.
The ~.., owing hack.
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