The daily collegian. (University Park, Pa.) 1940-current, September 07, 1978, Image 1

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Sentinels Afternoon crowds watch Wednesday's soccer game from the new stands at the soccer fields
16 • •
Connally testifies on assassination of JFK
WASHINGTON (UPI) Former
texas Gov. John Connally, brushing
tears from his eyes, Wednesday relived
the events "indelibly etched in my
memory" of the day in Dallas when he
was wounded and President John F.
Kennedy was killed by an assassin's
bullets.
/Connally and his wife Nellie testified
On the opening day of the House
Assassination Committee's' month-long
public hearing into Kennedy's slaying.
The Connallys agreed there were three
shots although Connally did not hear
the second, which hit him and they
lame from behind and to the right of the
'Residential limousine in which they
Legibnnaires disease strikes in New York
*NEW YORK (UPI) Medical investigators moved
into the crowded Garment District Wednesday in an
effort to find the source of Legionnaires disease, which
killed one man and was suspected as a cause in eight
other cases, two of them also fatalities.
The dead man and the suspected victims all worked
in or near three large buildings containing about 150
haying
offices, apparel showrooms and manufacturing
firms.
The federal and local investigators began a
systematic survey to determine the extent of the
disease and the source of its airborne bacteria. The
search found two more possible cases in addition to the
seven previously identified as confirmed or suspicious.
4 Of the newly identified cases, one was a 65-year-old
Woman who worked for a • garment manufactuer,
Summit leaders ask for prayers, meet
CAMP DAVID, Md. (UPI) President Carter, Egypt's
President Anwar Sadat and Israel's Prime Minister
Menachem Begin began their Middle East peace summit
Wednesday with a two-hour,meeting on the sun:flecked patio of
Itarter's lodge.
Preceding their first joint conference with an appeal for the
prayers of mankind, the three leaders started into their labors
in complete privacy and with none of their advisers present,
said White House press secretary Jody Powell.
He said the first conclave began at mid-afternoon and lasted
just under two hours. In keeping with the rule of secrecy im
posed by Carter, however, Powell would not disclose the initial
topics of discussion or describe the atmosphere of the meeting.
AiPhotographs showed Carter in sports attire, and Sadat and,
&gin in coat and tie seated at a wooden table on the patio.
Cartel' was grinning and Begin was smiling at Sadat, who was
gesturing in illustration of some comment.
-Earlier, the three leaders issued their first joint statement
from the ultra-private summit in Carter's guarded moun
taintop retreat. It was an inspirational appeal White House
aides said was framed by Carter and approved by Sadat and
i "As we meet here at Camp David," it said, "we ask people of
1 all faiths to pray with us that peace and justice result from
.1 these deliberations."
Although secrecy was the order of the day, White House
officials said enough to indicate the cozy, informal atmosphere
was starting io have the effect Carter wanted.
They
,said Sadat and Begin broke the ice when they en
countered each other by accident op a sun-dappled walking
the
daily
were riding with Kennedy and his wife
Jacqueline.
Their accounts substantially agreed
with Connally's evidence before the
Warren Commission 14 years ago which
concluded Lee Harvey Oswald was the
lone assassin.
Connally Said he felt the hearings
could not answer all the remaining
questions about the assassination.
"I wish I could believe that all the
speculation and all the rumors could be
dispelled. I don't believe that ... Some
circumstances are incapable of being
' solved," he said.
Opening the hearings, committee
'chairman' Louis Stokes, D-Ohio, had
Health Department officials said. She later died at
Caledonian Hospital in Brooklyn. .
The other was a plainclothes policeman assigned to
the area, officials said. He was reported hospitalized in
good condition.
Dr. John Marr, director of epidemiology for the
Health Department, said the woman became ill on
Aug. 15 and the policeman five days later. "We have
not been able to ascertain any new cases for at least
two weeks," he said.
That only two possible additional cases were found
left officials optimistic. "When we look back, I think
we're going to see ( the outbreak) was in mid-August, it
is not continuing and the number is very small," Marr
said.
By late Wednesday, investigators still had not pin-
Collegian
•,
. , ,
path. Cabinet ministers. were said to be riding around the
camp on bikes.
. Wednesday's three-way conference was the first of a series
of parleys that may run for a week, 10 days, or longer, in this
setting. Powell kept a tight lid on news, even declining to
comment on the mood of the proceedings.
"Frankly, we felt it would not be in the best interests to
engage in temperature-taking at sporadic times," Powell said.
The opening session was the first working meeting between
Sadat and Begin since last Christmas in Egypt, when their
dramatic peace contacts started losing steam and heading
toward collapse.
Powell said Carter laid the groundwork by holding separate
two-hour meetings with each man beforehand.
Although aides have said Carter's plan is to shun fixed
agendas and ease into the issues in a conversational way, the
three men eventually will have to deal with the central
disputes concerning Israeli occupation of the West Bank and
Gaza Strip, and the future of the Palestinians.
Meantime, the casual setting of the rustic camp also
provided just the sort of ice-breaking touch Carter had been
hoping for.
Well before the appointed hour of their first conference table
meeting, Powell said, Sadat and Begin met each other, while
strolling in shirt-sleeves along the camp's wooded walkways.
They shook hands and exchanged pleasantries for a few
minutes before continuing their separate constitutionals under
sunny, blue skies. While they were chatting, Powell said,
Israeli Defense Minister Ezer Weizmann a man especially
well-liked by Sadat pedaled up on a bicycle and joined them.
MEE
cautioned "certain issues may not be
resolved at all ... not all questions that
can be asked can be answered."
Following the Connallys' appearance,
the panel viewed a series of previously
published films and photographs which
have been the basis of various con
spiracy theories of the assassination.
But any analysis was left for later
sessions.
Thursday's hearings will be concerned
solely with the Kennedy autopsy reports
and expert analysis on the nature of the
wounds.
After viewing a color film of the
shooting, Connally said he would not
t- ~,
~,:
argue with other theories of the number
and direction of the fatal shots.
"These things are etched in my
mind," he said. "I'm not going to argue
with experts. Things we say we are
certain about because we are absolutely
sure that's what happened."
He said as the motorcade passed the
Texas School Book Depository on Dealey
Plaza on Nov. 22, 1963, "I heard what I
thought was a rifle shot. I immediately
had fear of an assassination."
"Then I was hit. I was knocked over.
The force of the bullet drove my body
over ... I was drenched with blood so I
knew I was badly hit."
"I did not hear the shot that hit me."
pointed the source of the disease's bacteria. Air con
ditioning, identified as a source in instances of the
disease elsewhere, was initially ruled out because none
of the buildings has a central cooling system.
Mayor Edward Koch emphasized that there were
few confirmed or suspected victims and, taken in the
context of a city that had 1,600 cases each of tur
berculosis and hepatitis last year, "it is not a panic
situation."
Marr said the disease cannot be communicated from
person to person and added that in the last of the
suspicious cases, the symptoms appeared Aug. 24.
Specialists from the city's Health Department and
the national Center for Disease Control in Atlanta
fanned out throughout the three buildings interviewing
workers.
Egyptian President Anwar Sadat, left, chats with Presi
dent Carter on the patio of the Aspen Lodge at Camp
David, Maryland, where the two.leaders are conducting
Black Caucus
rallying against
PSU holdings
By A. JOSEPH GROSSMAN
Daily'Collegian Staff Writer
The Black Caucus has launched a
campaign to gain student support for its
drive to persuade the University to
divest of all investments in South
African-related companies.
The group's goal is to have the
University drop its interests in any
company profiting 'from investments in
South Africa, Butch Randolph, caucus
president, said.
"We cannot force the University into
divestiture," he said. Randolph said the
removal of investments will be slow
even though a significant number of
people are aware of the problem.
A petition recommending the dropping
of such investments has been signed by
about 1,000 students, Randolph said.
Eventually, he said, the petition will
be presented to all representative
student organizations on campus to gain
their support for a bill to be introduced to
the Undergraduate Student Government
Ex-professor rejects
previous settlement
in tenure denial suit
By MARY ANNE MULLIGAN
Daily Collegian Staff Writer
A professor who sued University
president John W. Oswald last summer
to learn the reasons he was . denied
tenure has rejected an offer of an out-of
court settlement.
Kurosh Ostovar, formerly an assistant
professor of food science, said he ex
pects a hearing on his case to be held in
the fall, but did not speculate whether it
will be held in Williamsburg or
Harrisburg District Court.
Kurosh Ostovar
.rejects settlement
A hearing previously scheduled for
August was postponed when an out-of
court settlement was reached, but
Ostovar said he has since rejected any
settlement. He declined to comment on
terms of the rejected settlement.
Mark Faulkner, a State College at
torney who is working on the case with
University lawyer Delbert McQuaide,
said the University would not comment
on the most recent developments in the
case.
in private
15°
Thursday, September 7, 1978
Vol. 79, No. 32 18 pages University Park, Pa. 18802
Published by Students of The Penbsylvinia State University
a Mideast summit conference along with Israeli Prime
Minister Menachem Begin.
Senate. The bill will call for a resolution
demanding divestiture.
A similar recommendation also will be
introduced to the Student Advisory
Board to University President John
W. Oswald, Randolph said.
"The University makes it a question of
economics and ignores the question of
slave labor," he said. But the caucus,
according to Randolph, wants to
publicize other organizations' efforts for
nationwide divestiture rather than offer
its own opinions on the situation.
"We need the cooperation of all
organizations," he said.
Future efforts of the caucus to bring
about divestiture will include large
workshops, and perhaps student rallies,
if they will put pressure on the
University, Randolph said. The group
will show the films "Last Grave at
Dimbaza" and "Apartheid: 20th Cen
tury Slavery" next week in Kern and at
the Paul Robeson Cultural Center.
Ostovar said he was never told the
reasons he was denied tenure, but said
he believes they may have been on non
academic grounds. He also said that
Oswald —.who makes, the final decision,
in tenure cases had not consulted with
the tenure committee in his department
and college.
Ostovar said this summer his
department head, David R. Lineback,
had rated him a 3.6 out of a possible 4.0
points for academic performance.
Lineback declined comment on the case.
In July, Ostavar speculated that he
was dismissed because he is the owner of
La Chaumiere restaurant, on West
College Avenue. "That's the first thing
that came up," he said. "Myself, the
head of the department and the dean
thought, 'What else could it be?' "
"There's nothing in the regulations
that says a faculty member can't get
involved in an outside business," he
said.
James M. Beattie, dean of the College
of Agriculture, said in July that although
he had recommended tenure be granted
in Ostovar's case, he nevertheless
believed tenure policy had been followed
in the dismissal.
It's going to end
Our string of sunny, warm late
summer days is coming to an end. Some
sunshine this morning will fade behind
increasing cloudiness by afternoon with
the chance of a few late afternoon and
evening showers and thundershowers
and a high today of 88 degrees. Tonight
should be mostly cloudy and cooler with
a slight chance of a shower and a low of
63. Tomorrow should be mostly cloudy,
cooler but dry and a high of 74.