16—The Daily Collegian Wednesday, Sept. 19, 1979 New grand jury blockage sought PITTSBURGH ( AP) The state Supreme Court was asked yesterday to block creation of Pennsylvania's first statewide investigative grand jury, which will be formed next week in Philadelphia. Attorney General Edward G. Biester said after arguments before the high court that he didn't know how long the justices would take to rule. "It's an important case," he said. "The court will want to be very careful in what it decides." Biester noted that there was no order in force to stop the grand jury, and the state would proceed with the investigation of public corruption and organized crime pending a ruling. Harrisburg attorney William. C. Costopoulos had asked the court to block the grand jury, contending that its powers were far broader than any previous in Finance committee approves spending limits HARRISBURG (AP) Spending limits for the state, local governments and school districts were approved yesterday by the House Finance Corn mittee. The constitutional amendment, which was sent to the full House, must be ap proved by two sessions of the legislature and then by the voters. The measure made it to the House floor after six months of public hearings ••••• 00000 ••••••••••••••••• CLIP THIS AD • And bring it with you to get • • FREE PLANT • • No purchase necessary. • • HOUSE PLANTS • Largest Selection in • • Central Pennsylvania • • GREENLAND • FLOWER SHOP • Stormstown, Pa. Phone: 692-8308 • Open Monday through Saturday • THE REAL ITALIAN LUNCH. A fantastic assortment of authentic Italian dishes is now being served at State College's newest and finest Italian Ris torante. FULL. BAR SERVICE HAPPY HOURS 10 PM -1 AM 119 S. Atherton St. telephone 237-6191 "Under the Red Canopy" 'vestige tive panel. "It is fraught with dangers," Costopoulos told .the justices. "It's a dire& threat to the constitutional liberties which this court has zealously guarded." Costopoulos said the high court has ruled in earlier cases that investigative grand juries must be limited to specific geographical areas and subject matter. "This court has always insisted on a specific urgent need for a special grand jury," he said. Deputy Attorney General James West argued that local district attorneys do not have adequate resources to fight white collar crime. "Any investigative tool is subject to abuse," West said. "The question is, do you throw the baby out with the bath water?" West said the special grand jury would be tightly and rewriting. Even more amendments and intense debate focusing on local limits are expected when the measure comes up for a vote, possibly as early as -next week, State spending would be tied to per centage increases in the personal in come of Pennsylvanians. Local limits would haVe to be set by the legislature within a year of the amendment's passage. Those ' limits Rendezvous In Spain. • You're a software applications specialist. When you picked this career, you never dreamed that one day you'd rendezvous in Barcelona, Spain with two Navy destroyers. But when your company is Texas Instruments and one of your cus tomers is the U. S. Sixth. Fleet, you learn to expect theunexpected, ; : , . 2'The destroyers; are equipped TI 6briffititgre'aiiinhey need new"s . "'" software fast. You come aboard and sail with the Fleet until your job is completed. Not a bad assignment for a soft ware specialist named Susie. You're glad you got into technology. find a way to make a chip talk, something no integrated circuit has ever done before. First application: an electronic aid that helps children learn to spell The world's first talking textbook. And that's just the beginning. The talking chip's potential is mind bending. You're glad you got into technology. If you're not in technology yet, think it over. If you are in technology, talk to Texas Instruments. Campus Interviews Oct. 2-3,12 " -.11 • ,i, . pp*. re'. . i'ficis : L bi Si Ili m< t: could be changed only by a majority of the voters in a municipality or school district. Strong opposition is anticipated from local government lobbyists, but they concede that the constitutional amend ment's popularity may be hard to beat. "Spending limits aren't needed," said Gil Longwell, spokesman for the Township Supervisors Association. He also said the supervisors soundly The Romance of Our Age is Technology The Incredible Talking Chip. You're an inte grated circuit designer at TI. You've helped Send for the 34-page picture story of TI people and places. Write: George Berryman, Texas Instruments Corporate Staffing, P. 0. Box 225474, M. S. 67, Dept. CG, Dallas, Texas 75265 • .•••, ALU i r t.f.,...17.4,,:,:,,—.tv,.e.t.-.,..-A,3,lzunmsdrompurraxv.fteecr,io.-zr-tun.-.l...mmtractAzbutwxockfrousoinnotke's controlled by a supervising judge, who will review grand jury transcripts and subpoena requests to make sure any investigation is based on solid evidence of need. CoStopoulos argued in rebuttal that individuals could still be subject to arbitrary subpoenas. "He has to hire an attorney and file a motion to quash the subpoena," Costopoulos said. "The individual's liberty has already been invaded." The • legislature authorized the statewide jury last year. Pennsylvania is one of seven states that have such authority. Biester asked in his petition for creation of this year's panel that the jury be allowed to investigate macing, kickbacks, narcotics traffic, illegal gambling and other areas affecting more than.one county. Six stories, one plot: ; 404.4 : 1, 9 , "46 1 1`,7 r/ - 1 The Salesman's , :‘'.- . 2 Dream. V - -:: You're aTI sales :."1.: , 7 .I;',. engineer. You've ;i ; .7 . : :: 1;:* got what is prob -. ?.:: ii, ably one of the most irresistible selling messages in the history of salesmanship. It goes like this: "Hold this TI-59 Scientific Calculator in your hand. Now, let's compare it to the most popular computer of the 1950s— the IBM 65,9 ; -. , ~,, ~ -.-,,,„ ~,, „ 1 -: .:1;....: to "The 650 WeigheValmost . thibe ...... 7 - - rig, requiredfive to' ioTo"rfi 61 ai i: conditioning and 45 square feet of floor space. And it cost $200,000 in 1955 money. "Now look at the TI-59 Calculator you're holding in the palm of your hand. It has a primary memory • capacity more than double that of the 650. It performs its principal functions five to 10 times faster. And it retails for under $300." With a story like this, the hardest part of your job is holding onto your sample. You're glad you got into technology. The Joy Of Complication. You're in semi- • conductor design at TI. You love it when people at parties ask you what you do. You say, "I make things complicated." (Pause.) "In fact, I got promoted recently for creating some majorcomplications." What you mean (but seldom • explain) is this: the more active element groups (AEGs) you can put TEXAS INSTRUMENTS defeated a proposal last year that would have put them in favor of raising their spending limits from 14 to 30 mills. "We already are exercising a great deal of frugality," Longwell said. "But this legislation is much the same as the ethics law. It's a favorable subject with the electorate statewide." Supporters of spending limits say a state limit would be useless if local limits are not imposed. INCORPORATED An Equal Opportunity Employer M/F on a single chip of silican, the more the average AEG cost goes down. In short, you make things cheaper by making them more complicated. Your work made it possible for a TI consumer product that sold three years ago for about $7O to sell today for $14.95. Your future looks wonderfully complicated. You're at about 100,000 AEGs per chip now and 1,000,000 • is in sight. You're glad you got into technology Y 4 -2 Outsmarting ; t.\ `.ll ‘'Y You've always Jy : designed air borne radars for 'A'‘ll TI customers. M` , ‘ A''‘!\ll4 , kiiko Now, all of a sudden you know your next radar design is going to stay at the airport On the ground. It's on the ground that traffic controllers at Los Angeles Inter national Airport have a problem. They can "see" incoming and out going airplanes on their radar just fine, so long as the airplanes are in the air. But when the airplanes are on the groUnd—touching down, taking off, taxiing, parking—they are some- times impossible to see and control. Ground smog obscures them. You believe you have an answer to the smog problem. You dig out the plans for an airborne ground mappipig radar you helped design. You adapt the design so the L. A. controllers can use it to see through smog. It works beautifully. • Today your smog-piercing radar is widely known as Airport Surface See what TI is doing in: • Microcomputers and microprocessors • Semiconductor memories • Linear semiconductor devices • Microelectronic digital watches • Calculators • Minicomputers: hardware, software and systems featuring software compatibility with microprocessors • Distributed computing systems • Electronic data terminals • Programmable control systems • Data exchange systems • Advanced Scientific Computers • Digital seismic data acquisition systems ax! This young girl settled comfortably in front of Willard Building must be wonder ing why everyoneabove her seems in such a hurry Oil Sleuths International. You're a geo physicist. A good one. You could be with any of the big oil compan i es. But -Wifhta — Compariy* '7ll • Air traffic control radar and Discrete Address Beacon Systems • Microwave landing systems • Radar and infrared systems • Guidance and controls for tactical missiles • Worldwide geophysical services • Clad metals for automotive trim, thermostats, and electrical contacts • Interconnection products for elec tronic telephone switching systems • Temperature-sensitive controls for automobiles and appliances • Keyboards for calculators and for many other products Detection Equipment (ASDE). It's standard equipment at L. A. Inter national and at the airport in Geneva, Switzerland. Other airports with smog and snow problems are expected to have it soon. You're glad you're in technology. . 14 ;;;Illsv** "‘"1„: whose specialty is the same as yours: Exploration. That's why you're at TI, in Geophysical Service. TI explorer ships, TI photo geologic aircraft and TI truck- and tractor-mounted vibrator systems are working all over the world. They're finding oil. And they're identifying areas where no oil exists, thereby saving huge losses in drilling costs. Also, Tl's worldwide computer network and its Advanced Scientific Computer is making 3-D recording and processing possible. This ex clusive exploration technique is the only practical way to unscramble "no-record" areas on land and sea. You're a happy sleuth. You're in on the biggest hunt in history. And your team is out in front. You're glad you got into technology. ...Vt4rl.l= Political prisoner Lunt home after 14 years WASHINGTON (UPI) Lawrence Lunt, gaunt, weary and trembling with %emotion at being home again, is not bitter after having spent 14 years in Cuban jails for his CIA activities but has no desil'e to help the CIA again, his lawyer said yesterday. • Lunt embraced his wife at National Airport and said the feeling of being *home with his family is "indescribable,': Lunt's lawyer 'said the one-time Wyoming cattle rancher has no regrets about being a CIA contract employee in Cuba in the 1960 s and feels "no sense of bitterness or recrimination" for his long incarceration in service to his country. '"He feels that he responded to his country's wish when he was asked to do something," attorney John Wainright said. But he said when Lunt was asked if he would help the CIA again he responded, "No, I think I've done my duty." Cuban President Fidel Castro freed *Lunt, 55, and three other Americans Monday believed to complete a total purge of political prisoners from Cuban jails in response to President Carter's decision to release four Puerto Rican nationalists imprisoned since the 19505. Within hours, the Americans were a picked up in Havana and whisked' to - Miami aboard a State Department , airplane. Rep. Benjamin Gilman, R- N.Y., who worked for years to negotiate the releases, escorted Lunt back to Washington where he was reunited with his Belgian wife, Beatrice, several relatives and the oldest of his three sons. 401 There will be a meeting of all Journalism, Speech-Broadcast and Theatre-Arts Majors who are interested in studying Mass Communications Spring Term 1980 in Manchester, England for 9 . credits. Wednesday, Sept. 19, 1979 in Room 2 Sparks at 4:00 p.m. Campus Interviews Manufacturing, Engineers TI Equipment Group At Texas Instruments Equipment Group a "unique" opportunity awaits individuals with degrees in Industrial Engineering, Mechanical Engineering, and Manufac turing Technology as members of our Manufacturing Engineering/ Control team. Opportunity Openings are available in the following areas: Classical Manufacturing. Engineering including NC programming, tool design and fabrication liaison. Project Manufacturing Control which entails the planning, coordination and control of all manufacturing activities relating to a project or program. Functional Manufacturing Control for the fabrication manufacturing activities of a project or program. This group provides the interface between the project and the fabrication organizations. Manufacturing Support which provides assembly methodization and mechanization, producibility engi neering and assembly tooling design. TI is called "the best-managed" company. If you read the polls, you know. TI gets the best scores. Other companies say TI has found "the fountain of youth," that we've managed to stay young and vital while growing big. Economists are impressed that we self-fund our growth. They are complimentary of our production and cost controls. (Over a recent 10-year period, Tl's unit output per man-hour increased 13% versus a 2% gain for the rest of the U. S. private sector. Over the same period, our prices decreased an average of 8% per year compared to an average 6% increase for every body else.) If you want intelligent, progressive management, there's no place like TI. Environment You will enjoy this hands-on, shirt-sleeve type job where ability to communicate is a necessity. The opportunity awaits you, and advancement is based upon your capabilities. If you want a move-up environ ment, a place to show what you can do, there's no place like TI. If unable to interview at this time, send resume to: • College Relations Administrator, Equipment Group/ Texas Instruments/P.O. Box 226015, M. S. 222/ Dallas, Texas 75266 TEXAS INSTRUMENTS Management Interviewing on Campus October 2.3 INCORPORATED An equal opportunity employer M/F Lunt, wearing a rumpled shirt, looked exhausted when he arrived at National Airport. He had little to say to reporters, but spoke in a firm, distinguished voice in introducing his family and thanking Gilman and others who helped negotiate his release. Asked how it feels to be home, Lunt said, "It's indescribable.". He said he plans to "just have a lot of family" for a while. Lunt, who was sentenced to 30 years in prison for espionage, would not confirm he was "an informer for the CIA," and said only that he "was connected to that agency." . But Lunt's brother, John Lunt of Sai'atoga, Wyo., said in a recent in terview that Lunt's cattle ranching operation in Cuba's Pinar Del Rio area was near the caves where Soviet missiles were hidden in 1962, and Lunt was in a position to observe those missiles. Besides providing inform'ation to the CIA about the missiles, he said, Lunt hid enemies of Castro's regime on his ranch. Wainright said Lunt was given a scant diet and denied the opportunity to work during most of his time in Cuba. He said at 3 a.m. the day after Carter announced he would free the Puerto Ricans, Lunt was suddenly moved to immigration facilities and "fed the very best food possible." "He's much fatter now than he was a few months ago," he said. "They fat tened him up. They almost force-fed, him." American political prisoner Lawrence Lunt is helped into a chair at a press conference yesterday after Lunt and three others' were released from Cuban prison by the Castro government. The Daily Collegian Wednesday. Sept. 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