Two Thornburgh cabinet officers resign HARRISBURG (Ap,—Two members »„ the MacLeod “■*_•&&. g £ ■■■■■ill °f Thornburgh s ■ \K , % had no warning of this,” said fast to expand the department, which he paid in eight weeks, convinced him there cabinet resigned yesterday within hou pjm MacLeod who plans to resume his feels should be more involved with was no immediate crisis. m reauest and^th” 6 olher by mutual . teaching career at the University of licensing, occupational health, mental “I’ve been aggressive and assertive,” ® omont y ~' *•*' Pittsburgh. “I never heard a word of health and other areas. • MacLeod said. “Obviously, what I did J Hkm • ' of operation of toUh depart, movingMacLeod, »ho ftved to. than 20 ■mfv| step down as health secretary. , MacLeod 50 criticized Thornburgh opinion and we’ll slow down,’ ” MacLeod houses from Thornburgh in Pittsburgh, . I Therequest apparently was prompted by MICT ill Sf H nn rfh?!Sf for brine hard to reach said said he had met the governor only once ■P. # growing friction between the two men ■ • .^heremustbfimproved com- He also told the governor he was before the election and spent an evening jgT J * .muSSns between the Department of unhappy that health research into the at his home at Thornburgh’s invitation. Industry Secretary Myron Jos p .■■ Health and your staff, and steps should Three Mile Island nuclear accident has Despite the circumstances surroun- BH V.- BBBBBBt resume teac g g be taken immediately to improve your been spread across several state ding his abrupt dismissal, MacLeod said Bn M a meeting Monday, the governor # own accessibility,” he said In his letter agencies rather ton concentrated In the his meeting with the governor was “it ' J ih’S r ,M UPlwlrephoto of resignation. health department. pleasant. jyj, Joseph and Joseph decider it was in Josepi. best interest that he resign," said Thornburgh press aide Patty Mc -7 Cormick. “It was a mutually decided thing,” she said. “I don’t know who brought it up.” has a in shadow of NEW YORK (UPI) Wall Street had its biggest day in history yesterday with a record 81.62 million shares changing shands on the New York Stock Exchange as government anti-inflation measures reverberated throughout the investment community. Stocks were broadly and sharply lower most of the day but managed to regain some strength in late trading. 3g, Panicky sellers swamped the stock market, driving volume past the 66,370,000-share all-time record with 90 minutes left in trading and finishing the ■ day with 81,620,000 shares changing hands. Trading was so heavy that the high -speed reporting tickers ran more than ' an hour late at times. Prices fell across the board in an extension of Tuesday’s worst decline in five years. The widely fallowed Dow Jones industrial average dropped more than 24 points at mid-session before the slide halted. M By the close, blue-chip stocks "managed to trim their losses, putting the average down 8.27 points at 849.32. In cluding Tuesday’s 26.45 loss, the Dow has surrendered 48.29 points so far this week. - The record volume was 23 percent ■ ■ higher than the previous record set Aug. 3, 1978, when the market was on an upswing. “The stock market is bending under the weight of record high interest rates and record low confidence in America’s leadership,” said Robert Stovall, vice $ president of Dean Witter Reynolds Inc. “People are scared,” said former presidential economic adviser Alan Greenspan. He said there is a “broad degree of uncertainty” because events of this type have never before been experienced. lif’ Comparisons with the Crash of 1929 now being recalled on its 50th an niversary this month are inevitable but analysts say incorrect. Gold soared on bullion markets yesterday. The “very nervous trading” f 202 PATTES Both resignations are effective at the end of the month. The governor’s office had no im- record day 1929 crash was the result of a “general feeling that the credit-tightening moves taken by the Fed will be recessionary without being strong enough to support the dollar,” said R. Leslie Deak, vice president of DeakPerera Group. The dollar continued to weaken on world money markets. The Federal Reserve Board has forced up interest rates in recent months in an effort to curb inflation but the demand for loans continued unabated because of the high amount of money in circulation. Shifting gears, the Fed announced Saturday night it would now let interest rates find their own level and would' instead concentrate its efforts on con trolling the money supply. This credit-tightening, which tran slated into an all-time high prime len ding rate of 14% percent by banks Tuesday, will roll through the economy to make consumer loans and mortages more expensive and in some places impossible—to get, analysts said. “It’s going to be very difficult for Mr. and Mrs. America to obtain new mor tgage commitments,” said Kenneth Biederman, chief economist for the Federal Home Loan Bank Board. He predicted mortgage rates would average 12 percent nationwide by the end of the year. The Fed actions that tightened its control over bank reserves and focused on money supply growth had been widely prescribed by businessmen and economists as the medicine to cool in flation. “This is just another example of how erratic people on Wall Street are because up until this week they have been after the Fed to control the money supply and that’s just what it said it will do,” said Irwin Kellner, economist for Manufacturers Hanover Trust Co. Alfred Kahn, the administration’s chief inflation fighter, said Americans have no choice but to put up with high interest rates and other anti-inflation efforts. Kathy Mills 4 copies Dr. Gordon MacLeod He told reporters that “getting through either by telephone or in person was exceedingly difficult.” He said he requested a meeting with Thornburgh in June and did not see him until Aug. 27. EPA to assess borough's recycling plans Editor’s Note: This is the last in a series on recycling in State College. By LINDA HOWLEY Daily Collegian Staff Writer The State College Municipal Council will meet with the En vironmental Protection Agency in Philadelphia to discuss recycling options, Municipal Manager Carl B. Fairbanks said recently. The date of the meeting should be set in a couple of weeks, he said. In a letter written Sept. 14, the borough invited an EPA consultant to State College to review its recycling or resource recovery plan, proposal by Raymond Regan, the borough’s resource recovery project coor dinator. ■ This would begin what the ERA calls “zero phase!’ work under contract, Fairbanks said. “There will be a joint meeting scheduled • with the county, the Cunningham's amendment approved, then defeated legislators convinced the House to later remove the provision. Because 21 House members were absent yesterday, leaders on both sides of the unilateral issue decided that a fifth —and final —vote would be held Tuesday. “They agreed that there then would be a vote on the full (divorce) bill, either with or without unilateral divorce in it,” said Democratic Whip James Manderino of Westmoreland County. But Scirica said he could not say whether supporters of unilateral divorce would try to send the entire bill back to committee if unilateral suffers another defeat. In the second unilateral vote yesterday, two legislators switched their votes and opposed unilateral divorce. But both said they were not pressured. “If there had been pressure, I wouldn’t have changed,” said Rep. Harry Cochran, D-Fayette. “It was such a close vote, I reviewed the bill to see if what I did was right. “Statistics that showed that divorces increased in California after they adopted unilateral divorce helped change my vote,” he said. By LINDA CAMPBELL Daily Collegian Staff Writer and The Associated Press HARRISBURG The state House yesterday ap proved a compromise amendment proposed by Rep. Gregg Cunningham, R-Centre retaining unilateral divorce, but later flip-flopped and defeated the amendment. The reform bill still contains alimony, equitable property distribution and mutual consent divorce, which would let a couple agree to dissolve a marriage. By a 90-92 vote, the House failed to restore unilateral divorce, which would allow one spouse to end a marriage after a two-year separation. The provision, in the form of Cunningham’s amend ment, had been reinserted in the bill earlier in the day by a 95-93 vote. Cunningham’s amendment extended the separation period from one year to two. Opponents of unilateral divorce refused to accept the compromise and had the amendment vote recon sidered. “Last week you voted to say that unilateral divorce is lls competed with foot injury By MIKE POORMAN Daily Collegian Staff Writer On the advice of her coach, Penn State All-American Kathy Mills decided to compete last fall with a foot injury that endangered the future of her running career. Mills, whose injury was diagnosed by an Olympic camp podiatrist as plantar fasciitis - a partial tear of the, ligament on the muscles that support the bottom of the foot - sought help from former -women’s cross country coach Chris Brooks on deciding whether to run and risk further injury or be red-shirted for the season, as she had wanted to. “Coach Brooks had a point - the team had a good shot at the national title,” Mills said. “But I felt we had a strong enough team to do well without me. I wouldn’t have made that big enough difference. “I was in the middle and didn’t know which way to go. The doctors and my parents were saying not to run ... I wanted to red-shirt,” she said. Mills said she never told Brooks she wanted to redshirt because “I didn’t know how she would take it." With Mills’ status still in question, the coach had to make a decision about the All-American’s capability to run com petitively —and with some help she did.’ “We discussed it with a number of doctors,” Brooks said, “and then we decided to let her run. I would have Coach advised star to run; cortisone used for pain In addition, he said he refused to declare an emergency at the Sarah Allen nursing home in Philadelphia although Rich Glanton, a deputy counsel with the Governor’s Office, advised him to do so. borough, the University and an EPA consultant, and everyone is in terested in the project,” Regan said. - Three options will be discussed at the- meeting: Having people from other states come to State College to discuss how their, resource recovery systems are working,' "having the council members visit other com munities with resource recovery not alright,” Rep. Martin Mullen, D-Phila., a leader of the opposition, told his colleagues. “Now you want to say that it will be alright after 24 months. “You can’t compromise with hell. You want to stay out of hell,” Mullen said. “What we’re talking is a principle, more than a time limit.” Although Cunningham originally voted to remove unilateral divorce from the bill, he said his compromise was an attempt to save it from recommital to the House Judiciary Committee, a move threatened by supporters of unilateral divorce. Cunningham said Rep. Anthony J. Scirica, R- Montgomery, a leading proponent of unilateral divorce, supported his amendment. “A two-year separation makes unilateral divorce more reasonable than unilateral with a separation of 12 months. If there is not reconciliation within that time, it is not reasonable to assume that there will be one,” Cunningham said. Two weeks ago, the House upheld unilateral divorce for a period of 12 months, but intense lobbying by the Pennsylvania Catholic Conference and Catholic donethe same thing again. I felt that Kathy wasn’t prepared to just quit. If it was a lesser athlete, we probably would have done it differently.” Also influencing Brooks in her decision to allow Mills to run was the possibility of gaining a berth on an international team. “In Kathy’s situation, the doctors said that if she made the team it would heal in a few months and she could run with the (U.S.) team in March,’’Brooks said when reached in Raleigh, N.C. To gain a spot on the U.S. World Cross Country team, Mills had to place in the top two at the Association of In tercollegiate Athletics for Women National Meet on November 18, 1978, a meet where Brooks. hoped she could also lead her team to a title. Mills’ problems started when she injured her foot at her home last sum mer. Mills continued to run on it, first in a race in Seattle, then at an Olympic Development camp run by Brooks. Stepping her mileage up from five to 10 .miles a day, Mills continued to run, hoping the problem in her foot was only a bone bruise, she said. Upon diagnosis of the severity of the injury, Mills’ foot was taped for support since no definite treatment is prescribed for this type of ailment. She continued running as the school year approached and the chances of a national cham- “There was no dispute with the governor. There was never a harsh word between us,” he said. MacLeod, a pioneer in health care programs, or having a local sym posium, Fairbanks said. A second meeting will then be held to discuss the best options for a State College resource recovery system. “I believe the borough is sincere in its attempt to find out how feasible resource recovery is,” Regan said. Regan said the project would cost $20,000. Half of the project would be funded by the borough and the other half by EPA grants, he said. “If the meeting is not in a couple of weeks, I’m going to get on the phone and ask them (EPA) why they’re stalling it,” he said. “We’re not panicky about moving quickly,” Fairbanks said. “We have winter to plan for it, and we’ll begin activity in the spring. ’ ’ According to the March 1979 issue of Waste Age magazine, a study for the EPA was conducted by' SCS Engineers, a consulting firm, on resource recovery for small towns pionship for Brooks and the Lady Lions increased. Arriving at school still in pain,Mills contemplated red-shirting herself, she said. However, she said it was decided to wait out the first three meets of the 1978 season and see if she could recover in time to run the AIAW National meet. For the next three weeks Mills went through an extensive • rehabilitation program. She swam and ran in place in a pool, rode a stationary bike, lifted weights, had ho‘t wax treatments, wore special heelcups, and had her foot taped a variety of ways. Ultrasound the use of sound waves to alleviate pain and break up scar tissue —was also tried, but it too failed. “It even hurt swimming and riding the exercise bike,” Mills said. With the regional competition ap proaching, Brooks took Mills to see a Philadelphia podiatrist. Mills was given . a shot of cortisone and fitted for a pair of hard orthotics. When inserted into her running shoes, these plastic molds of her feet were designed to alleviate some of the stress on her foot created by running. “The cortisone masked the pain, so I was training harder than before. I was continuing to tear the tissue and make my injury worse, without even realizing it,” Mills was quoted as saying in the Fall 1979 edition of Nutshell magazine. Sports medicine doctor and Washington Post writer Gabe Mirkin in administration, took a two-year leave from the University of Pittsburgh to take the cabinet job. and facilities such as hospitals, prisons, universities and airports. SCS Engineers found that modular incinerators for energy recovery and source separation for direct recycling of commodities like paper were the most desirable concepts, the magazine said. The EPA’s grant to the consulting firm also, required researchers to determine other information that shpuld be included in the study. Waste Age cited three necessary studies outlined by SCS. They in clude: detailed, in-depth waste characterization studies for small generators. studies of building design to determine if changes would aid resource recovery; •, studies of large-scale, refuse driven fuel systems in development stages to apply similar procedures to small-scale generators. his book, The Sportsmedicine Book: “Not only can they (cortisone shots) weaken the fascia (Mills’ injured muscle), but they can stop the pain nature’s warning signal that you should be taking it easy and by continuing to exercise, you can cause further damage.” Her foot molds, Mills said, made the injured foot “hurt even worse.” No wonder, as running podiatrist Dr. Steven Subotnick reported in his book, The Running Foot Doctor, "... the plastic (of hard orthotics) may actually cause irritation to the fascia, which tightens as the runner gets up on the balls of his feet. For speed training, I generally recommend semi-flexible or sofidrthotic,” Eventually, Mills said, she changed to softer orthotic molds, which provided some relief. However, she continued to run, and place well, in all her meets. She won the Continued on Page 9. It's now November Cloudy and November-like today with a few rain showers this afternoon. The high , will be an unseasonably cool 47. Continued cloudy and very cool tonight, with a few lingering sprinkles and a low of 39. Tomorrow will be yet another mostly cloudy, breezy and cold day with a high of only 45.