The daily collegian. (University Park, Pa.) 1940-current, May 09, 1980, Image 3

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    The Daily Collegian Friday, May 9, 1980
News briefs
Rescue mission to stay secret
WASHINGTON (UPI) Defense
Secretary Harold Brown told
Congress yesterday it will not get all
details of the unsuccessful Iran
rescue mission because that in
formation could endanger future anti
terrorist moves.
Brown stood his ground despite
complaints from Sen. Henry Jackson,'
D-Wash., who argued that outsiders
cannot make a •fair judgment on
President Carter's decision to order
the raid unless they know just what
the mission entailed.
Brown said, "It is clear that some
details of what was planned would
if revealed compromise our ability
to carry out anti-terrorist activities.
• "For that reason," he told repor
ters, "it is best that they not be
revealed.'!
The rescue mission, staged April
24, was called off in the early stages
because three of eight helicopters the
commando team flew into Iran broke
down.
Pope warns African nations
ACCRA, Ghana (UPI) Pope John
Paul II yesterday. warned African
nations not to allow themselves be
exploited or their culture diluted by
advanced nations prospecting for
economic or political gains.
The pope gave his warning in a
greeting to Ghana President Hilla
Limann after flying the breadth of
Africa from Kenya to Ghana, where
he will meet for the first time with
Robert Runcie, the new Archbishop
of Canterbury.
"Too often relations between states
and governments, especially when
viewed in the context of political and
economic development, are seen in
terms of mere self-interest, of
strengthening already dominant
positions, and of pressure applied
through aid," John Paul said.
"The result is that older and
economically more advinced nations
fail to see that the young countries
have much more to offer than simply
a share of their natural resources or
being a market for the products of the
industrialized nations.
"Africa has something distinctive
Pa. chief justice bids farewell
HERSHEY, Pa. (AP) Chief
Justice Michael J. Eagen, bidding an
emotional farewell yesterday after 21
years on the state Supreme Court,
feels the best way to improve the high
court is to allow it to choose what
cases it should hear.
And Eagen, giving his annual state
of the judiciary report to the Penn
sylvania Bar Association, said he
would be "bitterly disappointed" if
the General Assembly fails to pass
enabling legislation.
"The Supreme Court cannot
possibly meet today's challenges
effectively and render the quality of
justice it should until it is a court of
discretionary jurisdiction," hesaid.
"The two intermediate courts
should carry the burden to try to
resolve the issue of justice in every
appeals case. The Supreme Court
should be the one defining the policy
of law, laying down guidelines for
courts below to follow," Eagen ad
ded:
Heinz Co. checks subsidiaries
PITTSBURGH (AP) H.J. Heinz
Co. said yesterday it has completed a
year-long investigation of improper
practices by three subsidiaries and
has given the report to the Securities
and Exchange Commission.
Involved were the Heinz USA
division, Starkist Foods and Ore-Ida,
senior vice president and general
counsel Don Wiley said in a telephone
interview.
In a statement, Heinz said "im
proper sales, expense and income
transferral practices" were prac
ticed by,the subsidiaries "without the
knowledge of corporate
management."
Their effect was to depress ear
nings for a given fiscal period, ap
parently because managers on an
incentive program had already
reached their goal for the term, Wiley
said.
Govt. wants Nixon documents
WASHINGTON (UPI) Richard
Nixon, Henry Kissinger, John Mit
chell and a dozen other . Nixon aides
have been told to return all
presidential documents they took
from the White House, the National
Archives said yesterday.
Acting Archivist James O'Neill
sent letters to Nixon and his aides
requesting all their historical
materials in compliapce with the 1974
Presidential Recordings and
Materials Act.
The law requires the archives to
"receive, retain or make reasonable
efforts to obtain complete possession
and control" of Nixon's White House
papers, recordings and other
materials.
O'Neill's letter eventually will go to
all Nixon White House officials who
can be traced telling them the
archives gets custody of all
documents, films, recordings or other
materials pertaining to government
business.
James Hastings, deputy director of
the Nixon Presidential Materials
Project at the archives, said material
ABC news reported Wednesday
that White House and Pentagon of
ficials began planning a second
military venture within a week after
the first effort failed.
White House press secretary Jody
Powell would neither confirm nor
deny the report.
"We have made clear that all op
tions remain open to us but no
decision has been made on the use or
timing of any particular one;" he•
said.
Back on Capitol Hill, Jackson said,
"We are at an impasse. They just
refused (to give out the information)
for reasons of security and I take it by
direction of the president."
Jackson is a member of the Senate
Armed Services Committee. Some
other members of the panel have said
they disagree with his quest to learn
the entire rescue plan.
Brown noted that senators have
Veen given some details of the un
successful mission and he charac
terized the effort himself.
to offer to the world," John Paul said,
raising his voice.
"I therefore say to Ghana and all
Africa: preserve your culture. Let it
become enriched through exchange
with other cultures but do not let your
own culture die."
In an ecumenical meeting later
with,non-Catholic Christian leaders,
the pope said he intended to further
the work started by the Second
Vatican Council 'toward the unity of
all Christians.
"We pursue our efforts towards the
goal of perfect unity and we give
thanks for the great bonds that
already unite us . . . ," he said.
The pope later met with Moslem
leaders and, citing the efforts of
popes John XXIII and Paul VI, he
pledged to further dialogue with
Islamic nations.
The pontiff flew from Kenya in east
Africa, Kaving already visited Zaire
and the Congo. He later will visit
Upper Volta and the Ivory Coast. .
The pope flew from Nairobi to
Accra to a warm and colorful
welcome at the airport by thousands
of singing and dancing youths.
Pa. Chief Justice
Michael Eagen
"Heinz has an incentive com
pensation program and when a
company reached its goal,
management in these instances
pushed earnings ahead in the next
year to give them a head start. They
were creating a cushion for the next
year," he explained.
He said the principle practice in
volved obtaining invoices in one fiscal
period, paying them and getting the
services rendered in another period.
In isolated cases, money was
sometimes returned when services
were not rendered, but Wiley said
there were no kickbacks involved.
Heinz said the practices clearly
violated the company's Code of
Ethics but that they "did not
materially affect its financial
results" over the 1972-79 period in
volved.
will be made public after being
screened for classified information.
"We think there probably are
materials out there that should have
stayed in the White House," he said,
but added:
"We don't know what they took."
O'Neill's letter covers thousands of
pages of transcripts of Kissinger's
White House telephone conversations
that the former secretary of state
took with him.
Kissinger turned them over to the
Library of Congress, where they will
be out of reach of the Freedom of
Information Act for at least a
quarter-century.
Attorney General Benjamin
Civiletti has said the Justice
Department may sue on grounds
Kissinger was a "prior possessor" of
the transcripts.
The archives already has more
than 50 million pages of Nixon White
House material and has barely
scratched the surface in
.its
screening. Hastings said the process
probably will take a decade.
Iranians to keep moving hostage.si
By the Associated Press
hostages away from the militants and
turn them over to the ruling
Revolutionary council, said he plans to
name a prime minister soon. This was
seen by observers as a move that could
strengthen his moderate position toward
the. American hostages, in captivity 188
days today. •
The. Revolutionary Council has acted
as an interim assembly and executive
until the new Parliament is set up,
perhaps in June. Iranian officials have
said dealing with the hostage crisis will
be one of the, first items of business for
Parliament. Final parliainentary voting
will take place today.
Tehran Radio reported the execution,
by a firing squad yesterday of three
•
Israeli-Palestinian relationship" grows worse
•
The Iranian militants holding the
American hostages intend to rotate them
among a number of cities, sending those
with the most suspicious backgrounds to
the least pleasant locations, a Tehran
newspaper said yesterday.
The conservative newspaper Donya
Iran said the militants, whO earlier this
week reported keeping the 53 hostages in
Tehran and 12 other cities, planned to
rotate them so that "American in
telligence will be confused." The
militants began dispersing the hostages
after an aborted U.S. rescue mission
April 25 that left eight American ser
vicemen dead in the desert 200 miles
east of Tehran.
By United Press International
Israeli commandos slipped along
Lebanon's southern coast near Beirut
yesterday to stage lightning ambushes
on Palestinian patrols and fought an
hour-long skirmish with guerrillas,
reports said. It was the second such
attack in three weeks.
On the diplomatic front, the
Palestinian autonomy talks deadlocked
over Israeli security demands and
Egyptian President Anwar Sadat asked
TRADE-IN-DAY
at the
MUSIC HUT
NITTANY MALL
Saturday May 10 10 a.m to 4 p.m.
WQWK FM will be broadcasting live
•
INSTANT CASH
for your "USED"Albums & Tapes
•
(sorry, no 45's)
*We pay from up to $2 per album or tape depending
on condition and artist.
eAll "used" albums and tapes must be playable
•No scratches or torn covers
•Extra buyers on duty
*Bring in your "used" and use your INSTANT CASH
to update your record collection.:
phone 2374$50:iourorZaeliir
gr 4
Office of the University Registrar Announces
Spring Term 1980 Conflict Final Examination n
Schedule 4
Printed below is the conflict final'examination schedule for Spring Term
1980. Only those students assigned to a conflict examination period
should follow the schedule outlined here. All other students will have
their final examination at the time and place announced in the original
ly published schedule.
The interpretation of the time designations used in the conflict final
examination period schedule is as follows:
COURSE TIME ' ROOM
COURSE TIME ROOM
Business Administration (B A'
Account in
201 Appt
202 Appt
300.1 Appt
401.2,3 Appt
403.1 Appt
403.3 Appt .
406 Appt
M!M
ricultural Economics AC EC
mm!momm.
001 Appt
402 2 2:30 108 Tyson
Air Force AIR
ndustr A I
Anthro•olo
001.2-6 V 10:10 107 CRCH
045 Appt
Architecture (ARCA
2.11
M 1 0 NMI
As tronom ASTRO
Biochemist BIOCH
2 10:10
Appt
Teal Science BT. SC
Solo: BIOL
011 Appt
012 Appt
033 Appt
231 Appt
452 Appt
472 Appt
M--Monday, May 19, 1980
T -- Tuesday,.May 20, 1980
W--Wednesday, May 21, 1980
Th--Thursday, May 22, 1980
8:00--8:00 a.m. to 9:50 a.m.
10:10-10:10 a.m. to 12:00 noon
12:20--12:20 p.m. to 2:10 p.m.
2:30--2:30 p.m. to 4:20 p.m.
4:40--4:40 p.m. to 6:30 p.m.
6:50--6:50 p.m. to 8:40 p.m.
!!1!!!ffill!I
einem, Lo
(AERSP 102.2306
Chemistr CHEN
011 Appt
013 W 10:10 1030 L • Food Science (F 0 SC
031 Appt
034 Appt
302 Appt
452 Appt
IMMIMOTEIg
uter Science CTIPSC
101.1 Appt
101.3 Appt
140 Appt
201 Appt
IMITEI
Economics ECON
002.1
002.2
002.3-14
004.1
004.2
004.3-14
014
0323.1.2
333.2
342.1
400
Electrical En
=IM
100 Appe
One of the American hostages has
tried to commit suicide three times and
may be dead, Italian journalist Oriana
Fallaci has reported, quoting an
unidentified source. She did not name
the hostage.
Writing in the May 10 issue of the New
Republic magazine, Fallaci quoted the
source as saying the hostage who at
tempted suicide was one of a group who
had been held, in the basennent of the U.S.
Embassy in Tehran. She said those in
the basement were "considered un
mistakably spies, and some of them are
or have been recently tied up because
they attacked the students."
President Abolhassan Bani-Sadr, who
has sought to take responsibility of the
for their po'stponem ' ent on the
ministerial level, continuing them on the
working level.
At the same time, tensions flared in
Israeli-occupied areas between Arabs
and Jews in several rock-throwing in
cidents. Relations have been strained
since the Palestinian raid that killed six
Israelis in Hebron last Friday.
In Lebanon, Palestinian guerrillas
stepped up patrols along the coast and
set up checkposts' along sections of the
M 10:10' 308 Boueke 012
App
Appt
Appt
Appt
Appt
Appt
10:10- /07 Sac Forager.
Appt
Appt
Appt
Appt
Appt
Appt
Appt
T 10:10
Appt
Appt
H 6:50
Appt
Appt
Appt
H 10:10
Appt
173 VU
171 till
173 Vii
Ineerin
Mechanics
012
013
215
216
Appt
Appt
T 4:40 206 H B
Appt
Eatoamlo: ENT
I=MIEGIM
105 Appt
210.2 Appt
H 2:30 211 Nor
Food Service end Housin
Administration FS HA
Forest Products F P
French (FR)
002 Appt
003 Appt
021 Appt
Cea:ra•h GEOC
Geosciences CEOSC
Cien:uuß
003 Appt
ff!!!1
11 "
012 Appt
020.3 Appt
021.3 Appt
n llndividual and F Ll
Studies
SLIAL
315
319
ineerin
350 Appt
406 App
waterfront following the midnight raid,
newsmedreported.
Israeli forces estimated by the leftist
newspaper Al Liwa to number at least
150 came ashore in rubber dinghies on
deserted beaches near the coastal towns
of Damour, 13 miles south of Beirut, and
Saksakiyeh, 31 miles south of the capital.
They were supported by helicopters and
naval artillery, Palestinian sources in
Beirut reported.
The Israelis•'had no apparent targets
The timeand place of a conflict examination for courses listedll
appointment (Appt).Should be , arranged between the students an)i the in—
structors concerned iE a mutually convenient time, but in no - .;.ose in
conflict with any other regularly scheduled final examinatiOUi.or at a
time which would create three final examinations on the same day for
any student.
Students with conflict examination schedules may obtain a copy ofohe
assignment form at the Office of the University Registrar, Room 110
Shields - Building. If, for any reason, an instructor bas,not received
notification of the students assigned to the conflict examination, ,t - he
student's copy of the conflict examination request and aszibnment form
may be used to certify that he has been assigned to the conflict exams
nation(s) thereon indicated.
COURSE TIME
Insurance INS
International Business I B
Journalism
bor Stud le
Landsca
n-Environment Relations K E R
:10.1 Appt
220.1 Appt
220.3 Appt
themat ics TH
120
161
162
240
250
260
Mechanical En
MMM
=51!!!
=M=rl
ineral Economics
Mining Ovc)
422 £pp
431 Appt
ROOM COURSE TIHE RJ
e Architecture
Appt
Appt
Appt
M 2:30 104 If B
Appt
Th,2:30 102 H
/01 T 10:10
102.2 Appt
P=7
M 4:40 211 M E
Appt
persons, including a woman cahlt
minister who served under the oust d
shah.
•i.
One was Esfand FarrokhrtWars i li,
former minister of education a d
training. Tehran Radio Saidl , she had
been found guilty of "plundering piLlic
funds, causing corruption; spreading
prostitution in the, ministry ofeducatidin
and training, cooperation with 'SAVO
(the shah's secret police), ‘. arid
making education and'. training
dependent on the colonial' culture Of
imperialism." - •
11
t.
Farrokhru-Parsa had served, und4r
former Prime Minister Amir,,AbbAs
Hoveida, executed in April 1979,
but set up roadblocks on the , inOin roid
on the outskirts of the two toWns and
waited for the first guerriil4ljeeps 'to
pass, Palestinian and Lebaiie§' leftik
sources said.
Two Palestinian guerrillas were kiVd
in the Damour ambush and, two otheis
near Saksakiyeh shortly after midnigh ,
the sources said.
The raid was believed in retaliation for
the Hebron killings.
Nutrition
• . . -
100.1 Appt
100.2 Appt
100.3 Appt
351.2 Appt
457. T 4:40 1 - 14 11 Dim
ImM'Mn=l
Appt
~7~
201
202
221
237
265
T 10:10 103 0 L
Appt
Appt 4t:
Appt
M 4:40 A 105 0 L
g .
Political Science (PL SC;
~'~
A 2'
nettat4ve Ihisiness Anal
Social° _ SOC
001.2 Appt
, 001.7 APPt
003.2 - Appt
0054 Appt
013 Appt
053 Appt
and Aildinlo
eech Patholo
5... j . A
44
m/11!El
fIIMI
Appt
Th 10:10
IN=l
ih,
151 Vll,
1131111
Thorpe first Miss Black PSU
By NANCY GOWER
Daily Collegian Staff Writer
Sharon Thorpe, with appropriate
crown and flowers, was named Miss
Black Penn State '1.430 last night.
An enthusiastic crowd filled the
4. Paul Robeson Cultural Center
auditorium to view the first Miss
Black Penn State pageant, sponsored
by Omega Psi Phi fraternity.
The nine contestents were judged
for talent, beauty and poise in each of
three categories: bathing suit, talent
and evening gown competitions.
In the evening gown phase, each
contestant was asked a different
question related to the pageant
theine, "Believe in Yourself."
Scores were given on a scale of 10
points for each of the three criteria in
the categories, with a 'maximum
1110 score of 90 points.
Joseph Laney, vice president of
Omega Psi Phi, said the entrance
requirements consisted of submitting
an application and a $3 entry fee. The
main aspect of the pageant, he said,
"was to promote community identity
amongst the blacks at Penn State."
That idea was emphasized by
Ernest J. White, who gave the
Rank & Rhodes
Friday & Saturday
nights at
THE 5a,,,,),)
101 MESTER ST
serving Pepsi• Cola
Sunda
MOTHERS
DAY
Pretty Hat Boxes
Filled with 1 lb of
Her Favorite . . .
Plain Boxes of
Assorted Candies.
opening address. White said "the
pageant is in appreciation of black
talent . . . and to encourage each
person to take pride in themselves."
Thorpe (6th-health planning and
administration) said she entered the
pageant for fun, and because she had
entered pageants in high school. In
-May 11th
Sharon Thorpe
©l9BO Ponderosa System. Inc.
the talent portion of the contest she
sang a Natalie Cole song, "I'm
Catching Hell."
She was also asked a question
concerning the goals of career
women. She repliedthat a woman
should devote herself to whatever her
priorities were a career or home.
To the delight of the audience, Thorpe
said that she hoped to do a bit of both.
Thorpe's University activities in
clude Quessence club and Black
Caucus. Her interests include
gymnastics and horseback riding.
Thorpe, in addition to the crown
and flowers, received a trophy and a
$lOO check.
First runner-up, Susan Lingner
(pre-medicine), and second runner
up, Fawn Coleman (9th-
Spanish/business), each received a
trophy and flowers,
Commercial sponsors of the
pageant include Burger King, K-
Mart, Mid-State Band, People's
Bank, the Student Book Store and The
Trophy Room.
Thorpe said her duties as Miss
Black Penn State 'BO include "acting
queen-y," and feels "the pageant is a
really good idea; it should go far."
[
s;er:charge 7l
•
':, .4, .. aa ii, a . c•mti.jj
vision of Tri•K Ent
Speaker says doctors must get facts
The varying facts and circumstances involved in a medical
operation are the major difficulty in applying ethical theory to
practice, a professor of medical ethics at the Hershey Medical
Center said last night.
K. Danner Clouser said physicians must dig into all the facts
concerning an operation and come up with the most rational,
ethical decision. He said the different criteria of scientific
proof are a problem in determining which facts are pertinent
to a specific case.
Doctors also face questions of definition, not of morality, on
certain issues, he said. For instance, he said, doctors know
that killing is wrong, but they question if the termination of a
fetus is actually killing.
Another, major problem in the difficulty of applying ethical
theory to practice is that of legislative laws and public policy,
Intricate maneuvers adorn Mother's Day drills
The University joint military services
will hold their 26th annual Mother's Day
Drill Meet at 1 p.m. Sunday in Rec Hall.
Drill teams from the Navy, Air Force
and Lion's Guard (Army) ROTC
departments will compete for individual
and team prizes in both precision trick
and basic military drills.
Precision trick drill consists of fancy
routines involving intricate floor
maneuvers, rifle tosses, handspins and
rifle catches of varying degrees of dif
ficulty and is divided into the following
categories: one-person drill, two-person
drill, squad drill (six to 10 persons) and
DON'T LEAVE TOWN
WITHOUT IT!!!
Buy your al/1(1M
for seventeen dollars, cash.
206 HUB
Do it now! Hurry, we
have a limited number of
yearbooks for sale. ,
U-133
gray fki
4gt4-1,.
t.inc-;No STATZON
JUNCTION OF Cot..t..sGE AVE. 8, GARNER T.
OPEN DAILY 8 P.M.-2.A.M, FR[DAy opal AT 3:00 ?It
Keep Happy Valley beautiful..Dop't litter.
platoon drill (11 or more persons).
•Basic drill is the normal military drill
taught and used in the Armed Forces.
Competition consists of individual,
squad and platoon drills.
Sponsorship and coordination of the
meet is rotated on a yearly basis among'
the University's three ROTC units. This
year's meet is sponsored by the Lion's
Guard and directed by Captain Thomas
M. Brady, U.S. Army.
The Lion's Guard is a registered
University activity open to all full- and
part-time students and is associated
with Army ROTC through sponsorship
mi
I'M
t 4 k-
Nri‘ 7 oo,l
tsiimp
The Daily Collegian Friday, May 9,1980-5
Clouser said. He said legislation such as the California Death
Act and new policies on topics such as euthenasia, which
Webster's defines as the method of causing death painlessly,
will restrict the moral choices doctors have.
Clouser also expressed a need for doctors to be specifically
trained in ethics. He said most medical schools were "con
ceptual ghettos" where students were taught to look at
everything with one point of view.
"Nothing in a doctor's education lends itself to thought
fulness," he said. "They are deluged with information and
don't think about it. All they do is process it."
Clouser said his job as a teacher was not to motivate people
to be moral, but to teach people who are confused about moral
issues to become more aware by widening their horizons.
—by Daniel Goldberg
The event is held each year to allow
the public to become acquainted with the
drill teams and to give parents an op
portunity to observe their sons and
daughters at work. Admission is free.
All three teams have participated in
intercollegiate competition throughout
the year at such universities as
Villanova, Rutgers and Bowling Green.
••• , -Pr-oru
114/(
and equipment. The Air Force and Navy
drill teams are directly sponsored by
their respective ROTC departments and
open only to ROTC students.
—by Paul Eckert