The daily collegian. (University Park, Pa.) 1940-current, September 30, 1976, Image 3

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

    University
to apply
'for funds
The Board of Trustees has
authorized the University to
apply for federal funds for
construction projects under
fJe 1 of the Public .Works
nployment Act of 1976
WEA).
5 PWEA is a federal program
designed to stimulate em
ployment by funding public
service construction projects.
Construction on these projects
ust begin within 90 days af
ter the funds are granted.
George R. Lovette, assistant
vice president for business,
said that the University could
only apply for funding for
projects at certain Com
qgnwealth Campuses. Lov
etie explained that only those
areas with an unemployment
rate above the national'
police identify man
from fata! accident
State College police yester
day identified the person
lulled in the Monday night S.
Atherton Street car accident
as Darwin L. Crissman, of
Sharon.
.University police Tuesday
afternoon apprehended two
persons on the HUB lawn for
pjfesession of marijuana. One
of them, Timothy K. Mc-
Curdy, of 1960 Weaver St., was
arraigned before State College
District Magistrate Clifford
Yorks and released on
nominal bail. A hearing was
for Oct. 4.
The other person was not
charged.
POLICE
LOG-
Cheryl Wiant, of 211 Pen
nypacker, and Susan Lewis, of
720 Shulze, were arraigned
Tuesday' before District
Magistrate Yorks on drug
4 violation charges.
MkxpMJtzicxfcMZßßnMttm. .»
MAAMM&AMMAMMUUMAWIAMIMAAAWwMAMMMAAMAMMMMSMMIVIMA r
\£Z>> the E
PATIO
\Yitf»-\ . declares I
evTy Thursday is
\\ HOI DOG DAY
\\ 4 Dogs for $1
1631 S. Atherton St. /« #♦ s irr\ \
(Below Hills Plaza) (Meg. <pOU ea.J
238-1412 ■
HILLEL 224 Locust Lane
7 p.m. Learn - Read - Hebrew
8 p.m. Mishna - Study
☆ ☆ 7:30 p.m. Israeli Dancing
Tomorrow Friday Services 8 p.m.
9 p.m. Oneg - Dr. Abraham
Glasner of Israel - “Science
& Religion” \/\y
Saturday Service 10 A.M. X X
Yom Kippur Sun. Oct. 3rd V
KolNidre 6:50 P.M. '
Monday, Oct. 4th 9:30 A.M.
FREE Break the Fast refreshments 7:55 p.m.
Tonight
illlllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllliu
GSA COMMONSPLACE THE/
■the big heat I
With Glenn Ford, Lee Marvin , Gloria Grahame
"THEBIG HEAT" is a tough, smoothly
written cops-and-robbers melodrama
direc'
with
flair f<
violei
exhib
other
Wednesda
& Thursday
Sept. 29 &.
7:30 & 9:30
112 Kern
Only $.75
immiiii
average are eligible for the
program, and the State
College area does not meet the
requirement.
Lovette said the University
is studying potential facilities
to see which are applicable un
der the program, but that no
final decision had yet-been
made. He added that the
program would have long
term benefits, creating not
only jobs in the construction
trades, but also permanent
jobs for faculty, staff and
students. -
The University cannot apply
for the funds until President
Ford signs the bill into law.
The bill was passed by
Congress and sent to the
President Sept. 24. A
spokesman for Rep. Albert
Johnson said the President is
expected to sign the bill.
The spokesman added the
reason for the 90-day limit for
starting construction was to
stimulate employment within
a relatively short period of
time, and the bill was intended
for projects, which were
already designed but not yet
funded.
Karen McDonald, of 303
Haller, Tuesday night report
ed the theft of several text
. books and a sweater, total
* value $45, from her room.
Edward Nedzom, a housing
supervisor, reported Tuesday
that unknown persons had
stolen a table from Haller
Hall’s main lounge. Its value
was estimated at $45.
Valerie Nesbit, a staff mem
ber in Kern Graduate
Building, at 9 a.m. yesterday
reported to University police
the theft of a $3O fan from 310
Kern.
Clifford Way, a housing
supervisor, Tuesday af
ternoon reported the theft of a
chrome mirror from the
ground floor men’s room in
Snyder Hall. Its value was $27.
Jeff Gelty, of 1013 S. Allen
St., Tuesday reported to
University police that a wheel
and tire had been stolen from
his bicycle while it was parked
near the Business Ad
ministration Building.
iAIER:
Bidding begins on municipal building
ByPAULGLUCKMAN
Collegian Staff Writer
For State College officials, nearly three years of waiting
may have ended when bidding got under way early this week
on the renovation of the downtown municipal building.
The building, on separate contracts for plumbing, ven
tilation, and heating and air conditioning systems, which is to
run through late October, kicks off a project that probably will
exhaust the bulk of $300,000 in federal revenue sharing funds.
The public will have a large stake in a newly-renovated
municipal building, Carl B. Fairbanks, municipal manager,
says.
Fairbanks says renovation should be looked upon as an
-efficiency measure: “The renovation of this building will
result in a more economical form of municipal government.”
Council members point to plans to move council’s meeting
room, currently on the second floor of the building, to a more
Ford's golf, Carter's foreign travel not up to par
By the Associated Press
Questions about President
Ford’s old campaign money
and golf outings and about
Jimmy Carter’s foreign
travel expenses swirled
through . the presidential
election chase yesterday.
In a flurry of developments
that broke the campaign
pattern of statistical gunfire
on the issues:
Democratic nominee
Jimmy Carter said President
Ford should go before the
news media to discuss reports
John’s Derailleurs
A GROWING CONCERN
★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★
| ™ E SCORPION
Calder Alley and Burrowes St.
M FnS?* presents M
t “SILENT WAY” *
* *
£ A LIVE £
* JAZZ EXPERIENCE *
$ TONIGHT AT 10 *
☆ Starring ☆
Capezio Dancewear
☆ co-starring ☆
Imaginative Women’s
Clothing
has MOVED
to
114 W. College Ave.
234-1022
(beside Jack Harper’s)
and is having a
40% SALE
on all
Cinnamon Wear
and other
Selected Merchandise
Open 9:30 a.m.-5:30 p.m. Mon. thru Sat.
Mon, and Fri. nights until 9:00 p.m.
that the Watergate special
prosecutor is investigating
what happened to con
tributions made by two unions
to Ford’s past congressional
campaigning.
Ford’s press secretary
said “hell, no” it isn’t the
President’s lifestyle to let
lobbyists pay for his
vacations and golf games.
But he promised to release at
an unspecified date the results
of a records search aimed at
finding out who paid when
Ford played golf from 1965 to
1973.
Everything for
hockey except
the ice. Now at
john’s derailleurs
CCM, BAUER,
TITAN, KOHO,
VICTORIAVILLE
480 E. College
acessible ground floor location in what is now a garage area.
“I will be delighted when we can get to the (council)
meetings without having to climb that horrendous flight of
stairs,” says council member Mary Ann Haas.
Fairbanks concurs: “I think we should spend more time
working on the council’s meeting room than we do on anything
else in the building. When we’re done, I hope we can have a
council room we can be proud of.”
But State College officials think that renovating. the
municipal building is generally a good idea, they have adopted
a cautious “wait and see” attitude on some of the specific
ideas. Contractors are being asked to bid on six so-called
“alternate” plans, one of which calls for an elevator for
handicapped persons.
Many officials, including Haas and Municipal Building
Authority Chairman Thomas B. Brown, fear the elevator’s
location in the building in present architectural plans will
Carter acknowledged
that foreign governments had
picked up some of the costs of
trips he took abroad as
Georgia governor when he
was trying to drum up trade
for the state. Carter said the
trips were strictly business,
and he distinguished them
from acceptance of free
golfing vacations.
Two large companies
said Ford had played each of
their courses once as the
guest of a company official
between four and eight years
ago.
Carter offered his
suggestion of a Ford news
CELEB'R
it s our 52nd ANNIVERSARY . . . get in on the SAVINGS!
Hurry to Danks big anniversary
SALE and take advantage of the
in every department.
savings
Plus ... register for great prizes!
We are giving away $500.00 in
Gift Certificates and a big trip
worth $2,200 absolutely FREE!
The Grand Prize Trip: Alpine Tour
15 days/14 nights visiting Austria, Switzerland, and Liechtenstein. The trip
is conducted by Gateway Travel Center, Inc., Lewistown, Pa., and includes
roundtrip airline transfers, a farewell party and welcome dinner, night
accommodations in castles, palaces, and mountain resort hotels, plus 3
meals daily and all tips and taxes!
* Trip not transferable. Danks employees and families not eligible.
conference during his own
first formal news conference
in almost two weeks as he
wound up a two-day rest stop
at his Plains, Ga., home.
Carter said the best way for
Ford to clear up the matter
about the Watergate special
prosecutor is for him to “have
a frank discussion with the
American people through the
news media, which so far he
has failed to do.”
The former Georgia
governor said he did not want
to be interpreted as having
assumed “that there’s any
substance to the allegations. I
have no way to know that.”
The Daily Collegian Thursday, September 30, 1976
hinder its use by handicapped persons. They question spend
ing close to $30,000 for an elevator that won’t be used as it was
intended.
Also deferred is consideration of a new phone system for the
building. Such a system would list individual numbers for
separate officials and offices, in addition to a central
municipal information number,,such as the one used in the
present system. Fairbanks says he hopes council can study
systems that now use decentralized numbers, as in state of
ficesin Harrisburg.
Still, Haas, for one, has reservations. If each office had its
own phone, she asks, what would happen at lunch hour when a
staff member leaves it unattended? And, she asks, would the
average citizen looking for help know who to call if confronted
with a list of specific numbers?
“These may be petty things,” Haas says. “But such a phone
system would cost $3OO more than our present system. I think
critical questions should be asked.”
declined comment on the
Carter said special
prosecutor Charles Ruff
should make public a full
report on the investigation
when it is finished, regardless
of whether that is before or
after the Nov. 2 election.
Ruff has repeatedly
probe, which reportedly
centers around whether Ford
converted campaign funds to
his own use through a local
Republican party organ
ization in Michigan while he
was in the House.
The separate matter of golf
games came up recently
when William Whyte, a
lobbyist for U.S. Steel Corp.,
said Ford, a longtime per
sonal friend, had taken three
golfing trips at company
expense in New Jersey and
stayed twice in a company
owned house near Disney
World in Florida while he was
a congressman.
White House Press
Secretary Ron Nessen said
Tuesday that Ford had played
on courses owned by three
other companies before he
became vice president.
Nessen said yesterday the
President has ordered his
records searched to see what
can be learned.