Havens for late-night i f .tudying accessible There is still hope this term for students suffering from late night study habits until Pattee resumes its midnight pours Winter Term. I According to Mary Musca, Academic Assembly president, classrooms in three Ouildings haye been opened past 10 p.m. for studying. w These areas are 109 and 117 Boucke, ~ 101 and 118 Wagner and 318 and 320 Willard. Boucke and Willard will remain open weeknights until midnight. The Wagner rooms, however, must be vacated at 11 • -. "It will be interesting to see how this irogram will work out," Charles Ness, loughdean of libraries ; said. "Even classrooms aren't a library at s Jaworski promises Korean revelations WASHINGTON (UPI) Keeping his witness list a secret, special counsel Leon Jaworski said yesterday the House Ethics Committee's hearings on covert Korean lobbying will produce revealing testimony on "what the project . . . _ really was." But Jaworski said the hearings, scheduled to run today through Friday, will not include . any effort to name specific members of Congress who may be implicdted "because we're not at that point yet." Others close to the months-long in vestigation said no further hearings are planned before January. Although Jaworski refused to divulge his witness list, other sources said the initial testimony probably will come from: Nan Elder, a personal secretary to Rep. Larry Winn, R-Kan., who has said a Korean embassy official gave her boss an envelope filled with $lOO bills a few years ago and she returned the money at Winn's instructions. She said she had been subpoenaed to testify today. Kim Sang Keun, the Korean ClA's No. 2 agent in Washington until he asked for and got political asylum here last fall. He supposedly passed orders from Seoul to Koreans involved in clandestine lobbying operations. This would be his first public testimony after cooperating with U.S. authorities for months, and he is said to want no pictures or recording during his appearance. Lee Jai Hyon, former chief cultural and information officer at the Korean embassy, has said he saw an am }bassador putting cash into envelopes for i delivery on Capital Hill in 1973. Lee quit t...._ . BEUE.F6N7E 4"lct *# FEATURING: TEXAS CHILI PIE served with warm bread $2.00 TEXAS-STYLE HAPPY HOUR from 5-11 P.M. 11105atrissifE 1 xrp . . (kr .4,1[ Dinner Special CHICKEN A LA REINE CREPES served with a salad & vegetable 1 BACKGAMMON INSTRUCTIONS at our backgammon tables beginning at 7'.30 P.M. I:ti • V et at vI e pi t4a ll it Wait SI Dinner Special COUNTRY BARBECUE NIGHT with ranch-style beans, vegetable & warm bread $3.95 To in THE PUB 1450'4 S. Atherton St. State College 2381533 mosphere, it will still be a quiet place to study and an escape from the dorms." Pollock Undergraduate Library is also open until midnight on weeknights. The building has been used heavily during these hours, Ness said. The reserve reading room in West Pattee has been open until midnight Sunday through Thursday nights. Ness said this area has also been used frequently. For those preferring a place to study closer to town, ,the Wesley Foundation on E. College Avenue is open daily until midnight. A spokesman from the foundation said the building has always been open, but has been used more by students since Pattee hours were reduced. by Vicki Schneider his post soon after and teaches jour nalism at Western Illionois University now. B.Y. Lee, a long-time employee of Tongsun Park the wealthy rice dealer and former Washington socialite in dicted by a federal grand jury as a ringleader of the alleged Capital Hill bribery effort. Park has refused to leave Seoul. The aim of this initial round of hearings appeared to be to lay out a blueprint of the alleged Korean government plan to influence U.S. policy in the 1970 s by providing members of Congress with cash payoffs, fancy gifts, free travel and entertainment or various other favors. "I think there's going to be evidence produced . . . that is going to be very revealing and meaningful," Jaworski, the former Watergate special prosecutor, said in a phone interview before leaving his Houston law office to fly to Washington. "It will be of considerable interest to the American people." Right now, he said, "we have in formation that enables us to go forward, to show what the project or plan really was . . . This first phase of hearings is going to indicate the tremendous pressure that was put on by the Korean government." As for identifying any member of Congress who may be implicated in a bribery scandal, he said House rules prohibit the committee from taking testimony in open session if the testimony might defame anybody. Jaworski also said he hoped the testimony at the hearings will make the Korean government more cooperative. riRDENZ 0,,:, :: .„.„,,,,,,,,, : ~,,,,„„. • 0 4 . , ,„.„, z ,,,,,,i ,_.„,„, . ... Earth Shoe footwear company grounded By DAVE BLAZEK Daily Collegian Staff Writer It appears as if the end of the Earth is here the end of the Earth Shoe, that is. The popular Earth Shoe line of casual footwear has been discon tinued because the manufacturer went bankrupt. Art Fine, owner of Bare Foot in downtown State College, which was the local outlet for Earth Shoes, said the company that manufactures the Earth Shoe went bankrupt in the later part of August because of "gross mismanagement." "Sales were good," Fine said. "The University-prison program slated for winter A program in which University students would work with inmates from the Rockview and Huntington prisons with legal and prison -related problems is being developed by the American Civil Liberties Union and the University. The program will be offered winter term for students in the Political Science department and the Law Enforcement and Corrections department. V tit Besides learning how to do legal research and to handle corrections problems, students in the program will function as a "relief valve" for tension in the local prisons, ACLU staff Director Paul Stevenson said. Stevenson said the ACLU receives many complaints from prisoners con cerning parole problems and how to go about ,getting jobs •after they leave Call your mother. Nobody in the world understands you the way she does. And she would love to hear how you're doing right now. Call your mother tonight... Long Distance. Because if you dial the call your self, station-to-station, between 5 and 11 P.M., you'll be able to talk for ten minutes for $2.57 (plus tax) or less to anywhere in the continental U.S. except Alaska! Dial•direct rates do not apply to person•to•person. coin, hotel guest, credit card, collect calls. or to calls charged to another number Dial direct rates apply on calls placed with an operator where direct dialing facilities are not available. Long Distance. What else is so nice for the price? company didn't fold because ,of the product." The Earth Shoe was marketed in approximately 130 stores across the country. Fine said the Earth Shoe company was bought out of bankruptcy by a California firm, the International Fastener Research Company. Internatimial Fastener is a liquidating firm that has bought such companies as Yellow Cab and Robert Hall. "International Fastener bought the Earth Shoe company as an entire package with assets of about $2.5 million," Fine said. • $ ~€ ..an NI CAI A, L .SAL E PitlL L." T.l-1 04)511 OE. tql the manufacturer has 9one broke eue-fo no putt olittepmduce—ille silogs will no loivier be made. . of Pre sale prices . $ • 11.'"" saors* Ls The window in the Earth Shoe store, above, tells the story of the once-popular shoe's demise. To the left, Earth Shoe employee Pat Burby holds up one of the sale items for Sigmund, a parrot and resident of the shop, to look at and comment upon. Photo by David March Included in that package were ,a factory, a newly built distribution center, the product name Wand the patent for the shoe's sole. Fine said that International Fastener will attempt to sell the Earth Shoe company for a profit. However, Fine said, "As far as I know, they haven't found a buyer yet. They may try to liquidate it piece by piece." Approximately 300,000 pairs of low quality stock will be auctioned off in New York some time later this month, Fine said. . Fine said that although Bare Foot is liquidating its supply of Earth Shoes, prison. Inner prison problems have often dealt with discipline matters, Stevenson said. Stevenson said the practicum is a "learn-on-the-job setup." After several orientation sessions explaining court system and the available legal resources, students will go into the prisons to counsel inmates and to help them in ,handling their legal and a Bell of Pennsylvania The Daily Collegian Wednesday, October 19, 1977 there is a possibility that some more may, be purchased from the shoe's inventor, Anne Kalso, who resides both in Phoenix, Arizona and Copenhagen, Denmark. "She still manufactures the shoe in Copenhagen," Fine said. "Several store owners are attempting to purchase a quantity of the shoe from her on a monthly basis." Bare Foot was previously known as the Earth Shoe Store. Fine said he did not have to change the name once the company folded, but he did so to in dicate to the public that they carry a wide variety of shoe lines besides the Earth Shoe. discipline situations. Should serious problems arise, Stevenson said the ACLU would most likely step in to see if professional legal action could be taken. Stevenson said in the long run not only will the practicum help the prisoners but it "will also point out to the prison of ficials areas that could be improved upon." Photo by Ken Kasper
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers