B—The Daily Collegian Monday, November 1, 1976 States try to crush cigarette smuggling WASHINGTON (UPI) Seven states are coun teraftacking organized The Interstate Revenue cigarette "buttlegging" that Research Center said its is causing millions of dollars intelligence reports on fife of tabacco tax losses, a buttleggers are enabling government-financed states to intercept and con research center said fiscate trucks and cigarette yesterday. cargoes and also get con "Buttlegging" is , un- victions and collect fines. derworld slang for an Thus far the centet is emerging big-time racket of coordinating investigations in buying truckloads of Florida, Missouri, Michigan, cigarettes in low-tax states Ohio, Indiana, Illinois and and slipping them into a state Minnesota, the report said. where they can be sold for These are some of the liigh- New York gunfight MECHANICVILLE, N.Y. apartment window on (UPI) Two persons, in- Mechanicville's Main Street eluding a, 21-year old part- before a Vietnam war Marine time police officer, were shot veteran asked +police, "Will to death Saturday night in a you shoot me if I come out?" wild two-hour shootout with and surrendered. police in the normally placid The suspect, identifed as streets of . this upstate New Kenyon W. "Billy" Piuyn, 31, York factory city. described as a member of a Ten other persons were prominent Mechanicville injured in the barrage of family, was charged with two gunfire from a • third floor H. Dev, professor dies at age aeA9 Raymond W. •Bortner, 49, ren, Raymond' W. 111, and a professor in the College of Laura C.• ' and a sister, Mrs. Human Development, died Pomeroy Nichols, of Augusta, Saturday at Centre Commun- Ga. ity Hospital. Memorial services will be .Bortner is survived by his at- 7:30 p.m. Thursday at the wife, Burnett M.; two child- University Baptist Church. GRAN D \ OPEN I N G How& 7ikr_ =Dm How,„ c--; nn nnnn PG :20 'llO c 3 0 sg3o @l‘,`T ID= a CHEAP THRILLS huge profits by evading high taxes. . tax states where big profits can be made. For example, the center said, Minnesota's tax is 18 cents a carton, compared to much lower taxes in the three main tobacco producing states North Carolina with a 2 cent tax, Kentucky 3 cents and Virginia two and a half cents. The center said its tips helped the participating states make 38 arrests and confiscate 54,000 cartons of cigarettes between April 1, 1975, and last Sept. 30. , "What we are really doing is establishing a toehold and as we get the cooperation and involvement of other states we hope eventually to get the upper hand," Executive Director George Stewart said. • kills 2 counts of second degree murder. Police said they found a dozen high powered rifles and shOtguns laid out neatly on the bed and "a couple of cases of ammo" in Pruyn's apart ment. About 100 state and local policemen were held at bay by the gunman in the shootout that began at 9:14 p.m. One of the dead was identified as Paul Luther, 21, of Mechanicville, a part-time cop who made $3.15 an hour on the force and had taken an examination to become a full time policeman just hours before his death. The other was James E. Marsh, 51, a nearby resident who was shot to death 'as he sat in a crowded restaurant across the street from the sniper's apartment. John H. Fri "Our Father, help us to realize the great truth of eternal living. Help us to see life as a whole, and build each stage of our !ivies with the total future in mind, each day a part and a step forward. AMEN" John Henry Frizzell. John Henry Frizzell, Penn State's resident psalmist, died Saturday at his State College home. He was 95. Frizzell, who . retired as chaplain emeritus and professor emeritus of speech in 1946, wrote 7,500 prayers that have appeared daily on the front page of the Centre Daily Times. He once said there were two secrets to writing a good prayer. "I guess you have to believe in prayer to begin with, and have a knack for English," he spid. - Frizzell came to Penn sylvania State College in 1902 as an instructor of 'rhetoric and oratory. With the exception of a six-year period in the early 20's, when Frizzell served as principal of the Reading High School for Tunney; Hayaka-w6 in :od4,'ilace SACRAMENTO, Calif. (UPI) Sex. American troops in Africa. Skiing in Switzerland. Teen-agers. Insurrections in Latvia and Estonia. That improbable collage of subjects is familiar The women's movement should protest against fare for Californians watching the off-beat race for' Playboy and Penthouse magazines "by picketing, the U.S. Senate between incumbent John V. Tunney by demonstrations, by any other means"to stand and challenger S.I. Hayakawa, who wants, to be up for the "right of privacy of their private parts." known as "a Republican unpredictable." • - Hayakawa became a national figure in the 60's The contest was neck-and-neck going into the last when he quelled campus demoristrations. week before the election. Then Hayakawa, famed as The United States should not hesitate to send a semanticist, ignited voter interest with' a last- troops into' South Africa to halt any future minute oratorical barrage reminiscent of his tough- "bloodbaths" and should "encourage an in- Boys and as field secretary for the Episcopalian Brotherhood of St. ' Andrew, he lived in the University community for the rest of his life. . He was made head of the department of speech in 1930, the same' year he helped establish what is now the Speech, and Hearing Clinic. Frizzel helped found three Pennsylvania speech organizations, one of which became the national Speech Association of America. Frizzell also organized . the campus chapter of the Episcopalian Brotherhood of St. Andrew, and Phi Kappa Psi fraternity. Frizzell was made acting chaplain of the college in 1928, and was appointed to the post permanently in 1937. As chaplain he presided over the weekly chapel service, and it was as chaplain that Frizzell first began to write prayers, which were 'collected into two volumes, "Chapel Prayer Book" and "For Days of Crisis." An edition of the "Chapel priyer Book" Went zezel I; ', psalm around the world with Army and Navy chaplains during World War 11. When 'Frizzell retired in 1946, he said the thing he most hated was "giving 'up chapel." He continued to write prayers into the 70's, although , a number ' of his prayers were repeated while he was in poor health. Jerome Weinstein; editor of the Centre Daily Time s, said Frizzell had written prayers for publication up to 'Nov. 9. That, prayer, Weinstein said, will be the 7,500 th prayer by Frizzell that the newspaper has printed. Weinstein said he plans to ask readers if they think ,to Times should repeat Frizzell's earlier prayers after Nov. 9. Five years ago, Tohn Henry Frizzell said he still believed in the power of prayer. "I say my prayers every night," he said. "I pray the world can and will be saved by our help and with God's help." • . , talking days as president of San Francisco State University. . A few selections argramiraw iimaikeivonvitkiv i ipszviwbarpams••; A rava i rairapwilipiwi t ranapwavv: .110:40:1050tomocermirmiiNeccem•moNexurx4ormemomorolicantmioneaNcanipmesnortemle ; . The • Brothers of 'Theta -Chi 1 n . • . • • as 41. wish to express sincere appreciation to At* 11. • 'el: .. . . : .2 . The - Sisters of Phi Mu , , i Mi. i t 4 ;1 I I: $ 0 . C q . Ate.• 6: ' . g g r.ltio. for a gieat Homecoming ME MI • * • I 6 .: . AN anda . , . . , . mi.. .. • , .' Fantastic Continuing Friendship ‘llO. ° A . q p. dat.. ell a ill lge le ar l ar e artar l a pl nte b are lk ar b a pl iara p ar , A 4ll 4 ll K6o ll.•••4ll.....4ll Z ll6....•••4ll :6; ll 2; 4lV a l leing/67441120"1 . .2.NLV:40.7:0•17:40:4•75,17:0.7507:1,7:11tMeRN1CC1P.9.10:er...4 r...5.74.7S cONCRIONONMIINNOWAVITIONMIA Ug ii Dm n o i cA O igs T ,THE vt -4) , Mop. Tues. -.'Weds:' • • :Thurs. - 1 4 0. - Sat. Football Ladies':, '';,Spaghetti Happy Steak Night 2: . Hoursftorri Dinner,. Hours from Dinners at the ,at the; / „e atithe ~ 4 -7,; * the ,at the , Lion's Den I : , Den '• •', Den ••(,''' -Eirery Oat"' urger, & • f rew:at• s e DEN , ....... AR,I .., 110 E. College Ave., State College ..... ............. Shop daily 9:30-9; Sat. 'til 5:30 ' • • . STONES • @CD (=g -J rovq c=i a, e- 6 ._..._ . Funeral services for Frizzell will be 1:30 p.m. tomorrow at St. Andrews ~ Episcopal Church, '2oB' W. surrection in , Hungary or Poland or Latvia or Lithuania or Estonia or Tibet for that matter." - - ,7 - - The minimum wage for teen-agers should be reduced to as low as $1.50 an hour and child labor laws should be relaxed. The goal would belower juvenile' crime rates and greater youth em ployment, Hayakawa said. Tunney, who defeated former student radical ,Tom Hayden in the primary' before' tackling ti, Republican nemisis of student radicals, is sticking to his oftspoken positions including a $l5 billion tax cut as the campaign nears the finish. S VS ' ak e d 6ect finA ll :i sse „ores a acoassones st, d Foster Ave. Viewing will be from 7 to 9 tonight 'at Koch Funeral Home, 112 S. Burrowes. .