:lindness difficult but surmountable Gary Le Gates, a •blind 1976 University graduate, punches a braille label to identify his possessions. ' , Ways & finalizes energy levy proposals WASHINGTON (AP) The House Ways and Means Committee wrapped up work yesterday on President Carter's energy-tax program, Piricluding a tax on gas guzzling cars, a levy to raise fuel prices, and rebates for every adult American. 'Chairman Al Ullman said 0 1 that in the long run the bill will meet the nation's requirements "without a jarring economic backlash." Laurence Woodworth, 'Carter's chief tax advisor, said that "over-all we think it's a good job." Woodworth did not seem concerned that the energy saving over the next eight „years would be only 2.8 mil lion barrels of oil per day, compared with the 4.7 million recommended by Carter. Some administration officials conceded privately that some industrial-conservation goals outlined by Carter were unrealistic.Z Although the package of taxes 'and credits was changed considerably from what Carter recommended on ' v Aptil 20, both sides agree the thrust remains the same. It includes a special tax credit of up to $4OO for persons who weatherize their homes; repeal of the tax deductions now allowed for state and Police log University police reported a weedeater . was taken from Porter Road near Beaver Stadium Wednesday. EStimated value was $250. University police reported unknown persons broke into the vending machine in the lObby of Snyder Hall y4sterday. Cash removed ‘frpm the coin box was estimated at $44.50. Kelly Ruppel, 420 Bigler Hall, reported her room and cai keys stolen Monday night. —by Wayne Johnson 1 237-4279 • ••'' TEMPLE DRIVE IN 'THEAT : RE 1600 N. Atherton St. TONIGHT "Julie Christie" •• . . • „MGM itrei en4 DEMON l ..,..... CO-HIT Farrah Fawcett ed: 11 ,.cfY I : legr, Unitrd Art.sts SAT. & SUN. Giant Dusk to Dawn SHOWS 5 Color Features 1 7F REE Coffee & Donuts Means local gasoline taxes; and new taxes and credits deisgned to make it attractive ' for in dustries and power plants to switch from oil or gas to coal. All that remains for the committee is a final formal vote on the tax provisions on July 13. A special ' House energy panel then will combine them with non-tax parts of the Carter program before sending the package to the full House. Then, the process will be repeated in the Senate. Starting with 1979 models, buyers of new cars that get poor gas mileage would face a tax of $339 or more. That would apply -to cars- getting between 14 and 15 miles per gallon. By 1985, the tax would range from $397 for models getting 22.5 to 23.5 mpg to $3,856 to those getting less than 12.5 mpg. The portion of the package 'affecting most people is .Carter's, t.x on crude oil, aimed at hiking the price of energy and ' thus forcing Americans to save. This tax would be phased in over three years, starting next Jan. 1. The levy would be paid originally by refineries, but the tax would, be passed along through alliages of the distribution chain, ultimately reaching consumers. By 1980, when fully ef fective; the tax would be expected to raise the price of gasoline by three to five cents a gallon and of home-heating oil by three or four cents. During the'3 3 / 4 years the tax would be in effect, it would 234 A LCOIIOO4II Ave. (Under Mid State Bank) THE STORE THAT STILL BELIEVES IN CUSTOMER SERVICE Terrific Values on All Athletic Shoes 'ERSE ALL STAR is Shoes- Hi's and Low SPECIAL $1295 Price CONVERSE ALL-STAR SPORTS SHOE Low $ 1 5 95 SUEDE FASTRAK JOGGING SHOE $1 599 JACLAR JOGGING SHOE Ribbed Cushioned $ 699 F u i T yr La d ; l r e a . n d N s tricot lined. Padded tongue, Reinforced arch support STAN SMITH HAMLET ADIDAS TENNIS SHOE Light, Soft Leather. G t . $23 50 Imp v !;o e v a e r d h i ti n u l lti g e rtp or so l le nger s o. 0 . 0/ frit ) Adjustable arch support. .9s By.LUCY JORDAN Collegian Staff Writer At an amusement park, a young woman waving a cane enters the hall of mirrors. She disappears into the maze. Only now is it obvious: The woman is blind. ~) Kathy Grant, a 1976 political science graduate, emerges seconds later out of the exit, long before all the others. Not all blind people have Kathy's dating or galloping gait, but many do move at a quick pace despite their handicap. "Each person has their own preferences when walking," says Ninette Mellott (1976 University graduate in Russian). "I have a great knack for getting in and out of cafeterias without spilling my food, but my fiance's specialty is galloping along the sidewalk. Ninette's fiance, Gary Le Gates, recently completed graduate studies at the University and hopes to teach high school Latin. He, too, is blind. Gary, Kathy and Ninette were all blinded the same way. . Premature babies born in the post- WWII-period were blinded when a high concentration of oxygen was pumped into their incubators. The babies eyes, positioned under the gas opening, were burned and formed scar tissue over the eye, blinding them for life. "Being blind from birth has its ad- remove more than $33 billion from consumers' hands. To prevent damage to the economy, Carter proposed and the Ways and Means Committee agreed - to return the money to con sumers. Taxpayers would get the money through slightly reduced payroll withholding; others, such as welfare and Social Security recipients, would get a special check in the summer of 1979. These rebates would go equally to adults regardless of their energy habits. The commuter who has to use 25 gallons of gasoline per week and heats with natural gas would get the same rebate as a person who owns no car and heats with coal.. The committee approved these $22 payments only for 1978. However, it is generally expected that similar "rebates" will be approved later for 1979, 1980 and the first nine months of 1981. Here are other major provisions approved by the committee: - --• 7 A renter, homeowner or condominium dweller could cut his federal income taxes by up to $4OO by installing insulation, storm doors and windows and certain other energy-savidg devices. The credit would be 20 per cent of up to the first $2,000 of ex penditures. Effective in 1978, tax payers who itemize deduc tions could no longer write off state and local gasoline taxes. A tax credit of up to $2,150 would be allowed for purchase of solar- and wind powered equipment for the home. The current four-cent tax on a gallon of gasoline would be extended through 1985. Without further action, the tax would drop to 1.5 cents in 1978. The two-cent tax on fudl for motorboats would be raised to four cents a gallon. . , - .• • master. charge • Open Daliy 9.30-5:30 FREE LAYAWAY Man. & Fri. till 8130 Compare and Save Terrific , Value , - c ,,,,,, ..,„ 1 „,;,... 0 . 7 -, l g "Z ..k,i44,-,)1. 1 ...., - , - 1 44% 0 14%.<*'''4......:1.i..' Nylon suede trim. Upper, three stripes, Protective toe bumper Molded Crepe Anti-Skid traction outsole. vantages," Kathy notes; "You don't know what you're missing. We still feel like everybody else emotionally, in tellectually and spiritually." Professionally, blind people feel the same way,;; but they don't always get treated thati way. Gary has been hunting for a job fog. , months without success. Some prospective employers greet his application ; with great enthusiasm until they discover he is blind, Gary said. "Then, they fiffd reasons to cancel interviews," he said. Less serious but still detrimental are some of the popular fallacies about the blind. A man once asked Gary to gauge his height and appearance by feeling the top of his head and touching his face. When Gary declined, he indignantly said, "But all blind people want to do that!" "Presupposed ideas about the blind are a hassle because so many in dividuals think we're scary or need pity, instead of looking at us as people, like themselves, who need to maintain a certain amount of self respect, Ninette said. "Most want a chance to hold their heads up." According to Charles Ness, assistant ~dean of University libraries, "There is a special collection of equipment at the library to assist blind students or anyone else who needs the opportunity to help themselves. "We have taped textbooks, prepared by volunteers from the Faculty Women's Money for water projects approved 'WASHINGTON (UPI) The Senate, fearing a veto, stuck with a tenuous com promise yesterday and ap proved money for half of the water projects that President ,Carter has targeted for ter mination. The Senate refused to ap prove amendments which would have added funds for six more projects and also rejected an amendment that would have killed funds for all but one project on the White Carter 'eager' to talk with Soviet president WASHINGTON (UPI) Denying that he has soured U.S.-Soviet relations through his stress on human rights, , President Carter said yesterday he would "welcome a chance this year" to talk things over with Soviet President Leonid Brezhnev. Carter said he felt no "fear, frustration or con cern" about relations with the Russians despite Moscow's hostile reaction to Carter's drumbeat of attention on human rights and on how, Russia treats dissenters. - Nor •has the Russian reaction spilled over into efforts to build a safer world, Carter said. Far-reaching and difficult talks on banning nuclear tests, demilitarizing the Indian Ocean and cutting production of conventional weapons are House "hit list." Final approval will not come until after the Senate ends its July 4 recess and votes on a $10.3 billion ap propriations measure which also carries money for the Army Corps of Engineers, a number of independent agencies and • commissions and two highly-controversial items the Clinch River Breeder Reactor and the neutron bomb. The Senate first rejected 73 49 - re cOvAlsilv ;:z:. Club and even a talking calculator," Ness said. Persons wanting these materials should call Ness at 865-7246. Taped transcriptg of Playboy magazine and •Readers' Digest are available, he said. The library has op tical enlargers and large print books for the partially sighted. For the blind there are braille typewriters, braille note takers, and books recorded on 8 r.p.m. records. Volunteers read textbooks onto tapes for students who inform them a term ahead of time, Ness said. In the future Ness would like to see a closed circuit TV system for the par tially blind so they may read better. How do blind students compete in the academic world? Ninette uses a braille typewriter to transcribe her class notes. "planning ahead is the key to a suc cessful school career. To get my books taped I have to think a term in ad vance," Kathy said. Another piece of equipment is the Opticon reading machine, which works by taking pictures of words, then shaping them into symbols on the hands by use of tiny electric shocks. The Association towards Building a mcre Livable Ehvironment for the Disabled (ABLED) has helped remove architectural barriers to the han dicapped in State College, Tim Fit zgerald, ABLED founder, said. "For a blind person, negotiating a revolving door is like dancing through an egg beater," Fitzgerald said. to 19 amendment by, Sen. Floyd Haskell, D-Colo., which would have provided full funding for five projects on the White House list of targets to be ended. In a separate action, the Senate approved 69 to 23 an amendment by , Sen. James Abourezk, D-S.D. over the strong objections of his colleague Sen. George McGovern, D-S.D. to remove the money for that project. progressing smoothly, he said. Even if he had anticipated the depth of Moscow's reaction, Carter said, he would have gone ahead with the human rights campaign. At a nationally televised news conference during which he announced his decision not to fund the Si bomber, Carter declined to confirm he is arranging to meet with Brezhnev in Alaska in August. No time or site for,a,summit has been fixed, he said.. -- , But he said he thought it would be useful "to get to know one another." This made it seem likely that a meeting will occur the first since 1974 between the newly elevated Brezhnev and an American president. havitl o n sttrainer B were '44-8. SALV.,I/2off C 0 ° .t t. 5 - o f poly cotton., linen, ‘-, rayons, in red, black, at white. 5-.13 428-68 SAlg, $19.99-49.99 ..145,1*5.3.. & piece styles in prints W3‘s 5-13 were (418-30. SNLV...4 5999 -3-599 '12.5.. assorted colors in poly cotton, . 61 oh 0 at linen. 5-13. wetesV7:29. SALE P ,- - r- , ..- 9 '5.. stylish slim skirts o f duck, chino. linen in white, black or red. were $27 3.1 e $19.99 4.-1-.5". drawstring, belted, pryats at ,olias of cotton, duck., poplut. 6-13. were $l4. SALE $9.99 S SKIRTS- of chitto,or duck SALE. bcack, red, khaki 5-13. were $27 $1399 SUNII6,It. 1-O,SSES 1 & piece aTeSSES. .31,111WEitlitF, Si. Sti.ilateSsC,';', ill COttoll & poly ittterockt; were $26-313. SALE $1.9.9-2A.99 Sill.....i'TS. xofig & short sleeve in strives plaids. "6-13. wreslB-2Z 5..-1-4. E, $9991 IC.:O W- • cap sleeve, solids, at stripes, ~c.._ novelty trims. S-INA-L. were '6lOl SALE. Pt).99 1.1311 ..,;(mae, st stripes, baStc, and ----oceltv's. one size fits all were (43=6 SALE $1.90 &. 2.99 312,17 s ----I3'. Ewa~ $ll.-10 SALE,I/2 off 5....:\155' 27 melt. NVeTC. $4-1-6 SA-LE-Vzoif 11...:-.--TS.. straw at visors. were 10. 5A.102 off 1.4*-.3.laps'lt&-sl.l.lBte "6-13 were I(ll.sl.lls..adig..systv.r.ictirg,c, sclluot.cshoes, ar. totes Surd o-iio per cerit off ah Qtiatititie,i, are livated. Be early for SWV. bet;t F,election. \lil/ sityiesit 110 E C (MC 3 M Atm ,Thurs., Vri.; shop Bail} E SO.:til Tues, NV 01., \ t Itta The Daily Collegian Friday, July 1, 1977- obstacle Charles H. Ness, assistant dean of libraries, explains how to use equipment for the blind. All of the instruments on the table are available at Pattee. Then the Senate, by a 52-34 vote, rejected an amendment by Sen. Thomas Mclntyre, D- N.H., which would have deleted funds for all but one of the projects on the "hit list" the Auburn Dam in California. The House previously had voted full funding for 17 of the 18 projects but by too narrow a margin to override a veto. By defeating the Mclntyre amendment, the Senate assured Congressional ap- In Moscow, Tass said it was "the U.S. side" which first raised the question of a meeting between Brezhnev and "James Carter." The discussions are merely "preliminary," Tass said. "I don't agree that there are growing difficulties between ourselves and the Soviet Union," Carter told a questioner at a news conference. On other matters, Carter called for an end to U.S. statements which have stirred both - sides in the Mideast, angering first one side, then another. More talk on the specific elements of a possible peace agreement should await the arrival of Israeli Prime Minister Menahem Begin in three weeks, he said. proval of eight projects on the "hit list": Applegate Lake in Oregon, , $7.4 million; Atchafalaya River-Bayous in Louisiana, $6.3 million; Cache Basin in Arkansas, $2 million; Hillsdale Lake in Kansas, $l4 million; Richard B. Russell Dam in Georgia and South Carolina, $2l million; Tallahala Creek in Mississippi, $5 million; Columbia Dam in Tennessee, $2O million; and Auburn Dam in California, $39 million.