12—The Daily Collegian Tuesday, Oct, 16,1979 Something completely different These insane members of the Monty Python Society ask you to spot the loony, or loonies. Their names, from left to right, are Bruce, Bruce, Bruce, Bruce and Bruce, Bruce.. . Autopsy begun on laetrile case death TIJUANA, 1 Mexico (UPI) Pathologists from the United States and Mexico began, an autopsy last night to determine what killed 3-year-dld Chad Green, the blond Nebraska boy who took laetrile to fight cancer. Chad died in his mother’s arms Friday, nine months after his parents had taken him to Tijuana t 6 undergo treatment for leukemia at a laetrile clinic overlooking the Pacific. The Greens said their son’s body might be shipped for burial to Hastings, c£!N snr^ J/ SI % ■ *'*inco»*° Tuesday October 16 7:30 HUB Assembly Hall Sponsored by the Archaeological Institute of America Penn State vs. Syracuse October 20,1979 Giants Stadium, East Rutherford, N.J. Tickets: $lO &$8 (low endzone) PENN STATE TICKET OFFICE ARCHAEOLOGY FILMS . ‘ Underwater archaeology Viking ships ? Excavating a fort in Virginia Archaeology of ancient Egypt ■ 237 Recreation Building Hours: 8:30 a.m. to 4:30 p.m Neb. as early as today. Chad was born in Hastings on Dec. 18,1975. San Diego County Coroner David Stark said it was beyond his jurisdic tional powers to send a coroner’s deputy toMexico. But later he said he would allow an assistant, Dr. Frank Raasch, to aid Mexican officials in the postmortem “strictly as a private pathologist.” The autopsy was approved by the office of Massachusetts Attorney General Francis Bellotti in a telephone conversation with the Greens’ attorney, William L. Ginsburg, Stark said. Ginsburg had advised his clients not to allow Chad’s body to be shipped to the -United States until the cause of death had been determined, apparently fearing action in Massachusetts where the Greens already face charges of contempt of court for taking the boy to Mexico. Gisnburg had sought the approval of Bellotti in the event that any court ac tions stemmed from the death. COLLEGE BOWL TEAM AND INDIVIDUAL REGISTRATION Pick up forms at HUB desk, Kern desk, or Academic Assembly office -203 A HUB Questions? Call Academic Assembly 865-9111 DEADLINE: Oct. 18 COMPETITION STARTS R-034 Oct, 22 ft /Pa •r ' * . • u* ‘ K ' t Consider this. A parka whose every stitch, every seam, every zipper and pocket . answers the basic needs of the human activity tor which it was designed. Rather than the tickle trends of fashion. The result? Parkas tailored to a set of precise demands for the active skier or the urban explorer Located at: 137 E. BEAVER AVE. STATE COLLEGE Hours: 9:30 - 5:30 - DAILY MON <S FRI NIGHTS TILL 9:00 Group members in rights march ByALETAOTT Daily Collegian Staff Writer ' Seventeen members of Homophiles of Penn State joined 75,000 other participants in the first national march demon strating united support for lesbian and gay rights last Sunday in Washington, D.C. The purpose of the march and the rally that followed was to demonstrate support for ending all social, economic, judicial and legal oppression of lesbian and gay people, according to national organizers. “There is a tremendous community between gay men and women, and. that showed through,” Tim Frei, treasurer of HOPS, said. “Each of the 50 states was represented, along with many national organizations, including the National Gay Task Force, the National Organization of Women, and Parents of Gays,” Frei said. / / Frei alsd said many marchers carried banners and hand held signs. “The purpse of the banners was more to show the groups represented. You had everything from gay social workers to United Gay Mormons to the American Psychiatric Association,” Frei said. Former HOPS president Joshua Rubinstein said one of the Court rejects money transfers WASHINGTON (AP) - The Supreme Court yesterday refused to legalize new savers’ transactions adopted by financial institutions, including automatic savings-to-checking tran sfers. The justices left intact a lower court’s ruling that existing federal law does not permit Certain methods adopted by banks, credit unions and savings and loan associations. The action, taken without explanation, may soon be made irrelevant by Congress. Legislation that would clearly permit the new practices appears to be near passage. At issue were regulations by three government agencies that oversee the nation’s money market. In late 1977, the National Credit Union Administration Board authorized federal credit unions to adopt “share draft” programs that allow members to withdraw money from their accounts by THE NORTH FACE CLOTHING NORTH& FOR THE MOUNTAINS AND THE CITY mCEIII ' N t i ' / \\\ 1 • %»•£>•*?' >.4f- • • N FA Ehl EXCLUSIVELY AT xlte. Pathfinder signing a check drawn on the credit union and payable through a bank. But the Credit Union National Association objected, charging that the use of share drafts is not authorized by law. Last May, the Federal Reserve Board and Federal Deposit Insurance Corp. allowed federal banks. to offer their customers automatic transfer of money from savings to checking accounts. The change was challenged by the United League of Savings Associations on grounds that it made possible the paying of interest on checking accounts, not authorized by any law. Also last May, the Federal Home Loan Bank Board allowed federal savings and loan associations to establish “remote service units,” which are off-premise computer terminals through which customers can make various tran sactions, including withdrawals. Under an earlier appeals court ruling, | This coupon worth ■ FINDLAY POLLACK I WARING WARNOCK i SNACK BARS Offer good Oct. 15 to Oct. 19. ffi $ I 1 i i' ! i 1 most frequently repeated messages of the march was that it was a broad-based movement to include all minorities. • “The thing about being gay is that it crosses all racial lines,”, Rubenstein said. ■I Rubinstein said more women participated in. this march' than in past marches. A past element of some gay males; parading dressed as females was absent from this march, he said. ‘ HOPS President David Albert said, “A lot of speeches at the rally were pretty much centered on the demands of the march, on the oppression of gays and about the fact that this was the, first national march and it showed a concentrated effort by a' 1 number of groups.” Albert said he felt the march was more important than the rally. Many supporters returned to line the streets and cheer on other marchers after they reached the rally, he said. While the march was definitely militant in terms of political view, a broad spectrum of views from radical feminists to, conservatives to socialists was represented, Albert said. “It was a march for our freedom, a march to show that we could bring in people from all over the country. It was a political message mixed with a celebration of ourselves/’ Albert said. PSU RED HOT and 12 oz. Beverage in ... * ,-Wr. 441 A *■/. A / / WHY THE CLOTHES YOU WEAR OUGHT TO WORK. You can't afford clothing that tolerates waste, and we can't afford to make it. The North Face serves a small but demanding clientele. Its bags, tents, parkas and packs an oasis of rational engineering. Now. tt seems, the rest ot us are ready tor more "engineered” clothing. The North Face Parkas. Make them attractive? them last? Certainly But, above all, make them work. financial institutions that are offering such services have until Jan. 1, 1980 to abandon them, under the appeals court ruling. In other matters yesterday, the took these actions: Agreed to decide whether the federal government must indefinitely hold some 2.4 million acres of Idahci desert land for possible irrigation am| reclamation by the state. . * Correction It was incorrectly reported iri yesterday’s Daily Collegian that Rep; Gregg Cunningham, R-Centre, proposed an amendment extending the separation requirement for a couple wishing 0$ dissolve a marriage to three yearsi Cunningham’s amendment actually proposed to extend the separation requirement to two years. \ * '•> “■1
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