The daily collegian. (University Park, Pa.) 1940-current, November 08, 1977, Image 5

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    Cyprus debate encounters snag
t
•,,' UNITED NATIONS (UPI) —The U.N.
1
,' :General Assembly opened its debate on
is * ;, :Cyp r us yesterday with a bitter
'! 'procedural dispute typical of the
.• , 1 problems that have split the
"JVlediterranean island's Turkish and
4`,Greek communities since Turkey's
,
finvasion in 1974. •
7: Ready to discuss anal act on an urgent
t,` ; ',call for renewed negotiations between
•',., qiirkish and Greek Cypriots, the
,fli General Assembly instead was tied up
,"tciVith a request to reverse its • vote in
ie
No oil price freeze,
hike is possible
BEIRUT, Lebanon (UPI) Oil
producing nations are unlikely to heed
;; American calls for an oil price freeze
When they meet next month in
Venezuela, the authoritative Middle
! Etat Economic Survey said yesterday.
f A spokesman for Organization of
i'etroleum Exporting Countries, whose
economic experts began meeting
yesterday in Viennato discuss oil prices,
discounted rumors of an imminent
niassive price hike. But he predicted
there would be a long-term increase.
i"lt has already become quite clear
qtiat there is no hope of even the most
Moderate OPEC producer heeding the
U.S. call for a price freeze through all or
part of 1978," said the Survey.
'"The Cart& administration seems to
A. be going all-out to convince the key oil
ooducers in OPEC not just to go easy on
titices when they meet in Caracas on
lac. 20, but to freeze them at their
present levels through 1978 or at least
with next summer in order to help the
world economy over its current bad
patch," the weekly said.
L., Shakespeare film, As You Like It (Czinner-Oliver), 6:30 p.m., Room 101
Chambers. Free admission.
Alpha Delta Sigma meeting, 7 p.m., Room 303 Willard.
Sports: women's volleyball, vs. Pittsburgh, 7 p.m.
•-• Tau Beta Pi tutoring service, 7 p.m., Room 104 Osmond.
,;American Society for Metals meeting, Howard Peiffer, AMP Inc., a 1956
alumnus, on `•`Contact Surfaces," 7: 30 p.m., Room 301 Mineral Industries.
Circle K meeting, 7:30 p.m., Room 308 Boucke.
Keystone Society meeting, 7:30 p.m., Room 312 Boucke.
P.S.O.C. Ski Division meeting, 7:30 p.m., Room 121 Sparks.
United Federation of Star Trek fans, 7:30 p.m., Room 169 Willard.
-Graduate Student Day. Dr. Helen Wise, Rep. of the 77th District, an informal
discussion of the current budget crisis and how it affects the graduate
r student population, 8 p.m., Room 112 Kern.
"The most moderate of the moderates
Saudi Arabia has already publicly
declared . . . • that it considers some
increase to be justified," the Survey
said. "No doubt others will be pressing
for much more."
OPEC hawks, led by Iraq, were ex
pected to seek an increase pegged to
their loss of purchasing power through
inflation and the slip of the dollar on
world money markets.
The Survey said that, although it was
"idle to speculate on the numerical
outcome," a rise of at least 5 per cent
seemed likely. It quoted a minister from
a "middle-of-the-road" OPEC producer
as saying, "If the Saudis. agree to 5 per
cent, they will have a deal as far as my
country is concerned; but we couldn't go
for anything below that."
In Vienna, OPEC chief spokesman
Hamid Zaheri discounted reports that a
drastic oil price increase was imminent.
But he said OPEC was aiming for a
high long-term oil price to discourage
"wasteful" use of diminishing.
petroleum resources.
UNIVERSITY SCHEDULE
Tuesday, November 8
SPECIAL EVENTS
September and hear separate speakers
from both communities on the island.
The move by Turkey was defeated, but
it put off further discussion on the issue
in general at least until late yesterday.
This year's Cyprus resolution, offered
by six non-aligned states that have
previously played a leading role in ef
forts to mediate the problem, asks again
for the resumption of negotiations
between the Turkish and Greek com
munities "on an equal footing."
In a new attempt to lift the
negotiations out of the' quagmire of
domestic political disputes that have
kept them • deadlocked for months and
generally prevented any progress since
the Turkish invasion, the resolution
asked the U.N. Security Council to "keep
the matter under constant review and
adopt all practical means to promote the
effective implementation of its relevant
resolutions."
The strategic eastern Mediterranean
nation has been divided into separate
Greek and Turkish camps since the
Military parade marks Soviet Bolshevik celebration
MOSCOW (UPI) Thousands of
crack troops and hundreds of military
vehicles paraded over the cobblestones
of Red Square yesterday in a giant
display of military might marking the
60th anniversary of the Bolshevik
Revolution.
Highlighting the three-hour spectacle
as it wound its way under a huge portrait
of V. I. Lenin was the first public ap
pearance of a new, laser-equipped battle
tank.
Soviet President Leonid Brezhnev and
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summer of 1974, when Turkey answered•
a' coup that tried to unite Cyprus to
Greece with a massive invasion and
occupied the northern 40 per cent of the
island.
The small U.N. peace-keeping force
that has been on Cyprus for 13 1 / 2 years
has kept the two factions separated since
then, and there have been no recent
military incidents.
The U.N. truce force, now about 2,500
soldiers, has cost more than $2OO million
since 1964.
other members of the Politburo
reviewed the troops from their
traditional post atop Lenin's marble
mausoleum. Thousands of specially
selected viewers watched the parade
from the sides of Red Square.
The parade began promptly at 10 a.m.,
with Soviet Defense Minister Marshal
Dmitry Ustinov riding into Red Square
in a gray convertible. He and General of
the Army Vladimir Govorov reviewed
the troops before the march began.
The military display was twice as big
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List of all items available at both stores prior to auction.
endangered by attacks
By United Press International
Israel yesterday warned
Palestinian guerrillas in southern
Lebanon it might respond with more
than artillery fire across the tense
frontier if they persist in their rocket
attacks in violation of a six-week-old
cease-fire.
The strong words from Israel came
in a report from the frontier by the
state-run national radio as Arab
leaders engaged in a flurry of
diplomatic activity centering on
plans to reconvene the Geneva
Middle East peace talks.
Palestinian forces in sourthern
Lebanon Sunday fired rockets at the
Israeli coastal town of Nahariya,
killing two civilians. Israel returned
artillery fire.
"If the attacks continue, then the
return fire will not be enough," the
radio's correspondent at the frontier
quoted security forces as telling him
in what was interpreted as a veiled
threat to send in ground troops.
The report reinforced a warning by
Defense Minister Ezer Weizman
shortly after the attack the first in
as in the past two years and Ustinov, in a
brief address, declared that the Soviet
Union intended to keep its defense
capability high.
"Our party and state lead the struggle
for peace, detente and disarmament,"
he said, "but at the same time we take
all measures required to further
strengthen our armed capabilities.
"Our defense potential is maintained
on such a high level that no one will risk
violating our peaceful lives," he said.
Brezhnev later toasted "to lasting
--)
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Israelis say cease-fire
SOUND
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Saturday, Nov. 12
9:00 AM
The Daily Collegian Tuesday, November 8, 1977
more than a month that Israel
would seek revenge for the bom
bardment.
"I hope that this attack on
Nahariya is not the beginning of the
end of the cease-fire," Weizman said.
Reports from the Lebanese side of
the border said sporadic shelling
continued yesterday but fighting had
subsided.
Israeli tanks and armored per
sonnel carriers were sent to southern
Lebanon in September to assist
Christian forces fighting Palestinian
guerrillas and Lebanese leftists near
the frontier. They were withdrawn
when the cease-fire was signed Sept.
26.
Jordan's King Hussein shuttled
between Arab capitals Monday to
discuss terms for reconvening the
Geneva conference. In Cairo, a
visiting Canadian leader predicted
the conference will be held soon.
Hussein met with Egyptian
President Anwar Sadat to discuss
strategy before flying to Damascus
for a surprise visit with President
Hafez Assad.
peace on earth" at a Kremlin reception.
"We will do everything in our power for
easing the threat of war, for
strengthening peaceful cooperation
among states," the Soviet leader
pledged.
Hundreds of units of Moscow's crack
military garrison, along with two giant
army bands, uniformed secret police, a
contingent of paratroopers carrying
maching guns and units of the Soviet
navy in dark blue wool uniforms goose
stepped past the tomb.
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