Kenturkv C'limhar This y° un g Kentucky fan, bored with the outcome of the Penn c uwnjr \slll lIUGI State-Kentucky game Saturday, left his seat early and took to the underpinnings of the Kentucky stadium. inoculation Flu program begins By The AP , More states joined the swine flu campaign this week, although many health officers say .they won’t offer shots to the general public until mid month or later. The .first shots were given Friday'■ in Indianapolis, Los Angeles', and a suburb of Boston. Fort Worth’s health department', said people lined up for one quarter of a mile when ,it open-.d a clinic yesterday attc predicted 25,000 doses v'ould be ad ministered. NeW Hampshire opened the first two of its clinics Saturday. ' "We were a little disap pointed in the turnout, but very pleased with the manner in which the clinics were conducted,” said Robin Mcßrearty of the New Hampshire Department of ffl ! —— l presents Health. There had been estimates that as many as 20,000 people would show up the first day, she said. Only 6,000—1,600 in the first hour came. About 6,000 persons were inoculated at a two-day health fair in Indianapolis, leaving Indianapolis-Marion County with about 50,000 doses of vaccine. “It went well,” reported Dr. James E. Bowles, chief of county health services, who said about one third to one-fourth of those were elderly and high-risk patients. Whether the vaccine will flow quickly enough from manufacturers to the states remains an open question. For instance, Kentucky received the first 120,000 of its expected 2.2 million doses only last Thursday. Dr. E L±=)i *<»«-« N - l- • »■ - Carlos Hernandez, the state’s director of preventive disease Services, ■ said it will take about two weeks to ship the vaccine throughout the state. Arkansas, which has only about 50,000 of its expected one million doses won’t open mass clinics until 240,000 doses are on hand, said Dr. Paul White, director of the state’s communicable disease program. Georgia has 500,000 doses of a promised three million, with the first shots to be given Wednesday at Decatur. Some of the most populous Protestors confront Ford WASHINGTON (UPI) Several dozen demonstrators calling for stronger U.S. efforts to learn about the fate of soldiers missing in action in Vietman greeted President Ford as he was leaving church services yesterday. Ford ignored them. Later, they paraded on the sidewalk in front of the White House as Secretary of State Henry Kissinger arrived to confer with the President on Photo by Barry Wyshlniki states New York, Illinois and Ohio are among those launching programs today. The first 100,000 doses to arrive in Illinois are being given by needle, not by the faster jetair injection method, because the first shipment arrived packaged for needles. Health workers can administer 3,000 shots a day by gun, compared to only 300 by needle. The first priority in Illinois will be the elderly and those with chronic diseases, followed by public safety officers. foreign policy matters. “How would you like to be presumed dead,” said one placard. . “Dr. Kissinger you bungled their fate. Go back to Hanoi and renegotiate,” said another. Others carried signs calling for no change in the status of MIAs without further infor mation from~' Vietnam about their fate. One carried an American flag. USG court approves Frontlash on probationary status for ternrl By JOHN MATTA Collegian Staff Writer The Undergraduate Student Govern ment Supreme Court last night ap proved the constitution' of Frontlash, a non-partisan voter registration and education group, after some discussion on duplication of services. The court’s major concern was over duplication of services 'between Front lash and the USG Department of Political Affairs. “There is a partial overlap, blit not enough to prohibit registration,” Bar bara Tersak, chief justice, said. However, the court placed Frontlash on probationary status for Fall Term because it had broken University regulations by advertising on campus before it was an officially registered organization. Under present rules, a new organization can advertise and hold one organizational meeting before it is of ficially registered. Prior to being Nun's beauty had stirred jealousy Pope proclaims Beatrice a sain VATICAN CITY (UPI) Pope Paul, VI yesterday claimed a 15th-century Portuguese nun, whose beauty provoked the jealousy of a queen, a saint of the Roman Catholic Church. More than 30,000 persons filled St. Peter’s Basilica for the rites canonizing Blessed Beatrice da Silva, founder of the Sisters of the Holy Con ception. two women who reportedly were cured of diseases after praying to Blessed Beatrice were absent from the ceremonies. One is dead and the other is a cloistered nun. Saint Beatrice was born in 1424 at Ceuta, Morocco, which was then under Portuguese rule, to parents related to Portugal’s royal family. As a young girl, Beatrice became a lady-in-waiting to Queen Isabella, the wife of King John II of Castille, and the queen became envious of the young girl’s beauty and popularity with the court. - In one of her jealous furies, the queen locked up Beatrice A HOMECOMING ROCK & ROLL CONCERT OCT. 16 8:00 REC HALL TICKETS $3.50, ON 9:00 A.M., SPECIAL GUEST: COMEDIAN FRANKLYN AJAYE registered, Frontlash had its name on a banner and posters that were displayed on campus. During the probationary period, Frontlash will have all the privileges of other student groups. If it doesn’t break any rules during the remainder of Fall Term, its probationary status will automatically end. Fritz Andrews, campus coordinator of USG’s Department of Political Affairs, told the court before it reached its decision that the department may receive little funding from the Associated Student Activities if Front lash is registered. “There are a lot of things that can hurt an organization if its not an officially registered student organziation,” Donna Lurie, president of Frontlash, said. “In terms of tables in the HUB, banners, advertising, in terms of membership, in terms of effectiveness, it hurts us not to for three days in a trunk where the young girl nearly suffocated. By the time she was 25 years old, the situation had become unbearable and Beatrice diplomatically retired to a convent in Toledo, Spain. Before her death in 1490, Saint Beatrice founded the new order of the Sisters of the Ulster firemen to boycott fi BELFAST, Northern Ireland (UPI) Firemen in Northern Ireland’s two largest cities Londonderry and Belfast announced yesterday a boycott of bombs, and fires caused by bombs in business premises. The action, taken against the advise of union leaders, backed up a demand for "danger money” of $8.50 a day, for battling bomb-caused blazes. Before the Londonderry ban took effect, firemen went to a downtown commercial building there to put out a fire Holy Conception, whose rule Pope Innocent VIII approved in 1498. For the rite, Pope , Paul spread of vice in the r entered the Basilica by the a mistaken liberty ... side door, donned his white mocking and tramp vestments and was carried in such values as h his ceremonial throne to the modesty and dignity." papal altar under Bernini’s “The saints have giant bronze canopy. represented a challe .■ ‘‘We are living in a our habits.” set by five bombs which went off inside 12 minutes. The bombs disrupted a Saturday night dance in what , had been the province’s most modern ballroom, part of an eight-story commercial building in the city center. One of the bombs was spotted and evacuation of the building began even before a caller saying he was from the Provisional wing of the outlawed Irish Republican Army telephoned a warning. There were no injuries. Early Sunday a car bomb SALE TUES. OCT. HUB DESK ' "5 be registered,” she said. i “You cannot be an efts' organization if you are not regislj Lurie added. ' The court also reviewed stitution of the. Rape Crisis V which runs a telephone hotline thl. rape victims and gives referrall Center also provides . speaker! educational programs. j At present, only women ansvjj. hotline. However, this policy hal dropped from the Center’s cons.p because a student organizatiorv discriminate on the basis of sex. I “Being a chartered orgarj provides for more- continuity |j really a psychological advantage: organization,” Gabriel Escobri Center’s vice president, said. 11 Within a week, the court will! whether to approve the Center’s cK limitlessly perm! society,” said the “The result has be J i blasted the main station in Roman Andersonstown. An Army spokesmai blue car packed with { pounds of explosives I without warning at ti Road gate of the which is surrounded anti-rocket fence and ( by at least three mac! posts. i The bomb blasted <1 of the station and extensive blast dan surrounding property/ one was injured spokesman said. P.M SSSIS? •V.r v 4“= ■ 5 •••- >•. IT: '4 EW ipei d
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers