—The Daily Collegian Tuesday, Oct. 24, 1978 Autumn Sonata A sure sign of fall has blanketed the ground and thankfully, it's not called snow Keep Happy Valley beautiful. Don't litter. ... .. Record T &Exchange .. .. • . . • • • wednesday, oct. 25 • hub reading rm. ~ . . . . . • register from 9-2 pm sale 11-6 pm .. . : . . sponsored by the usg dept. of programs and services and senate. • No explosive found in search after Beaver Stadium threatened By ALLEN REEDER Daily Collegian Staff Writer Army explosives experts brought in to search Beaver Stadium Friday and Saturday because of a bomb threat found no explosive, Director of University Safety David E. Stormer said Monday. A letter received off campus said there would be a bomb planted at the stadium Saturday during the Syracuse game. University Police Services was warned Thursday evening by State College police, Stormer said. He said the case was being handled by State College police and would not say t 6 whom the letter was addressed. State College police said no information is being released. Agrees to fines on illegal payoffs Westinghouse Electric admits guilt WASHINGTON ( U P I ) Westinghouse Electric Corp. agreed, yesterday to plead guilty and pay $300,000 in fines on 30 counts of illegally concealing payoffs to a foreign govern ment official. But a federal judge declined to accept the plea immediately. , U.S. District Judge Barrington Parker, after a hearing on government charges against Westinghouse and the plea agreement, delayed a ruling until a further hearing this morning. The Justice Department filed the agreement in District Court along with charges that the big electrical equip ment manufacturer "willfully and knowingly" made false statements to federal agencies between 1975 and 1977. But when Parker was asked to accept the agreement, he pressed attorneys for both sides to explain the "compelling reason" for their failure to disclose names of the - country and individuals involved in the payoffs. "The only difference that I see bet ween this and any other criminal case that comes before the court," Parker told the lawyers, "is that here we have a significantly large corporation and in many other cases all we have is some poor individual." Jeffrey Hirschberg, a Justice Department lawyer, told Parker it was "in the interests of the United States" that the name of the foreign official be withheld. He said the government and Westinghouse had agreed under the plea FOR YOU AND YOURS, two twelve ounce T-Bone Steaks, prepared to your liking. Our,salad bar, potato, warm bread, and 1 / 2 litre of wine or pitcher of beer —s4 O.UO nr. TUESDAY RIB-EYE FOR TWO Choice Nine Ounce Steaks $11.95 DINING HOURS 5 p.m. thru 10 p.m. MON THRU SAT 4 p.m. thru 8:30 p.m. SUNDAYS A two-man explosives team from the 28th Ordinance Detachment of Let terkenny Army Depot in Chambersburg, Pa., was stationed at the University on a stand-by basis Saturday afternoon and evening, Letterkenny spokesman James Boyle said. He said State College police called Letterkenny Thursday. University police secured the stadium Friday morning and about 12 officers searched it. During Friday aftefnoon and evening about 75 warning signs were posted around the stadium to alert spectators to the possible danger, Stormer said. , Four community services officers Bomb threat notices were last po t sted were stationed there Friday night and in Beaver Stadium in 1972, he said. :: _1 arrangement that the country and the people involved would not be identified. Hirschberg said the names of overseas bribe recipients were withheld in cases earlier this year involving Control Data Corp. of Minneapolis and The Williams Co. of Tulsa, Okla. He said in the Westinghouse case, "a district manager in a foreign sales of fice" delivered $250,000 to a foreign government official on behalf of the company in 1975, setting up a $3O million to $35 million contract for Westinghouse. In 1977, the same sales manager passed $73,000 to the government official for another large contract, Hirschberg told Parker. The first contract was funded mostly by the Export-Import Bank, and the Haberle to have operation Undergraduate Student Government President Dave Haberle will undergo an operation at 10:30 a.m. today for a possible tumor on his left testicle. Haberle, who was admitted to the Mountainview Unit of the Centre Community Hospital yesterday, said the operation is necessary to determine whether or not the lump he discovered last week is in fact a tumor and whether or not it is spreading. Haberle said he went to the Ritenour Health Center when he first noticed the lump and was, examined by a urologist MT. NITTANY INN Both Specials include our salad bar, potato, warm bread, and 1 / 2 litre of wine or pitcher of beer. Reservations Accepted: 364-9363 Past Nittany Mall At. 144 Between Pleasent Gap and Centre Hall "Beef and Brew and a Breathtaking ednesday Special T FOR TWO SEAFOOD PLATTERS FOR.TWO Baked Shrimp, Scallops, and Fillet of Sole - $13.95 • - i lights were left on, which is not usual practice. One officer is usually stationed at the stadium the night before a gam . 4, .4, Stormer said. At 5 a.m. Saturday, police began "another very thorough search" lastin until 9:30 a.m., Stormer said. Ever room was searched and the stands were checked. i During the game the stadium secur4 force of 43 officers, about 55 student assistants and 18 state policemen were watching for suspicious packages ancol for persons matching the psychological Profile of a bomber, Stormer said. -.: second was funded entirely by the t Agency for International Development, he said. Vincent Fuller, an attorney for Westinghouse, submitted documents ro i l. Parker to review, contending they would convince the judge of the need to keep all names secret. is Justice Department officials said they name of the country was withheld because of the instability of its govern ment and for U.S. national security reasons. Westinghouse, in an statement issued in Pittsburgh, said "the payments to the foreign official represented an isolatepS' transaction which was made entirely without approval by, any Westinghouse r, executive officers." last Friday. The urologist put him on antibiotics in hopes that the problem w4s just an infection. ~ However, Haberle said the antibioti6s have had no effect on the lump as of "The doctor said if it was an infection, it would have been reduced by now,'.' Haberle said. The lump has not caused Haberle arty pain, he said, and if there are, no other complications, he should be released from Mountainview on Wednesday. : i t —by Scott Dille.), View" THURSDAY BAR AND LUNCHROOM OPEN 11:30 a.m.-12:00 midnight MONDAY—SATURDAY 1 p.m.-8:30 p.m. SUNDAY