The daily collegian. (University Park, Pa.) 1940-current, July 02, 1980, Image 3

Below is the OCR text representation for this newspapers page. It is also available as plain text as well as XML.

    The Daily Collegian Wednesday, July 2, 1980
News briefs
Begin rests after heart attack
JERUSALEM (AP) Prime
Minister Menachem Begin was
pronounced in good condition
yesterday following a mild heart
attack, but he turned over his job to
his deputy for at least a month.
The 66-year-old Begin's personal
physician, Dr. Mervyn Gottesman,
said Begin, who suffered an ob
struction in a small artery in the wall
of the heart, will remain in the
hospital for two to three weeks for
observation.
After a week or two more of rest at
home, Gottesman said, Begin "will
return to normal activity. We believe
Mr. Begin will be able to function
normally as prime minister and
continue for along time."
• Deputy Premier Yigael Yadin, who
Mudd accepts job with NBC
NEW YORK (UPI) Roger Mudd,
who lost to Dan Rather as Walter
Cronkite's successor at CBS, jumped
to NBC yesterday as its chief
Washington correspondent.
The exact date when the 52-year-old
Mudd would join the network was
uncertain because he is presently
bound by contract to CBS, although
he has not appeared on that network
in some time, an NBC spokesman
said.
But Mudd will not take part in NBC
coverage of the summer presidential.
conventions or the fall electioni
because his contract with CBS runs ,
until the end of ' the year. A CBS
spokesman said he will not be
released until then.
CBS News president Bill Leonard
wished Mudd well in his new job, but
added, "Others have left CBS and
come back I hope he does, too."
The announcement of Mudd's
switch came first from William
Small, president of NBC News, who
said the newsman eventually will
appear nightly on the NBC news show
anchored by John Chancellor.
Chancellor said he was "absolutely
delighted" that Mudd will be joining
NBC and quipped, "It will be a lot
more comfortable working with him
than against him."
In accepting his new position, Mudd
Black delegates urged to vote
MIAMI BEACH, Fla. (UPI) One
of Miami's most respected black
leaders told delegates to the National
Association for the Advancement of
Colored People's 71st annual con
vention yesterday that blacks face
"annihilation" unless' they find a
solution' to their problems.
Athalie Range, 'chosen , Miami's
most respected black leader in a
recent poll of area blacks, told
delegates the solution to the problems
that caused three days of rioting in
Miami last May must come from
blacks themselves primarily
through pressuring the system with
votes.
"The only better day I can see,"
she said, "is if we can use the
strength and flex the muscles we
never knew we had. The strongest
potential we have is to register
ourselves and get out and vote.
She warned that unless the
problems plaguing blacks are solved,
black people "face annihilation."
Nunn criticizes army recruits
WASHINGTON (UPI) Army
Secretary Clifford Alexander came
under a barrage of criticism
yesterday for allegedly failing to
recruit quality personnel, and was
told the service should reduce its
manpower by 25,500.
"If they (the Army) have the
choice between the two going for
quality or going for numbers they
go for numbers every time," said
Sen. Sam Nunn, D-Ga., as the Senate
went into a second day of debate on
the $51.9 billion arms procurement
bill.
"The secretary of the army is not
going to do anything about it, that's
apparent," Nunn said.
Nunn's recommendation, endorsed
by the Senate Armed Services
Committee, is to cut Army strength
from 775,800 to 750,300 to shock it into
dealing with the manpower quality
problem.
The theory is that with lower
strength, the Army would be under
Drunk driving penalties sought
WASHINGTON (UPI) Sen.
Claiborne Pell, D-R.1., citing the
deaths of two of his staff members in
18 months due to drunk drivers,
appealed to Congress yesterday to
enact minimum punishments for
driving while intoxicated.
"While there is much emphasis
placed on the fact that some 20,000
Americans were murdered last year,
very little outrage is expressed over
the loss of at least 25,000 of our
citizens annually in accidents in
volving drunk drivers," Pell told a
Senate commerce subcommittee.
He said another million Americans
are injured each year in accidents
involving drunks, and the figures
may be much higher since single-car
fatal accidents are seldom counted in
statistics as attributable to drunk
driving
"The real tragedy of this crime is
that we all share the attitude of the
leads the more moderate faction in
Begin's coalition government, will
take over most of Begin's respon
sibilities while consulting with the
ailing leader.
Observers believe Yadin, who will
determine the agenda of the Cabinet
meetings for the next month, could
delay actions Begin might have
taken, but he can have little other
influence on government policy.
Begin was taken ill Monday just
before a debate in Parliament on a
motion to call new elections. The
motion was defeated 60-54 while
Begin was undergoing initial tests.
Gottesman said the "tension and
pressures" of the last few months
may have contributed to Begin's
latest heart trouble.
Roger Mudd
issued a statement through NBC
which referred to his beliefs on news
presentation.
"To become part of NBC News is at
once exiting and reasuring," he said.
"It means that we share certain
principles of journalism that the
news should be paramount, that
nothing and no one should get in the
way of the news, and the news should
not be trifled with."
"Unless we huddle together and
find a solution, then in the final
analysis not only will black Miami be
annihilated but black America," she'
said.
She told the delegates to leave the
plush confines of the convention in
this resort city and visit the Liberty
City area of Miami and Dade county,
hardest-hit in the rioting that caused
18 deaths and an estimated $lOO
million damage.
"Get off the beach, leave the
Fontainebleau, and get over there to
Liberty City," she said. "See if you
want that to happen to your city."
She warned: "Miami today,
tomorrow anywhere U.S.A."
Range was one of several Miami
black leaders who spoke at a seminar
on urban crises during the con
vention's second day. The speakers
stressed the responsibility that
blacks have for bettering their lives
and deplored the rioting.
less pressure to recruit quantity and
could concentrate on quality.
Senate leaders set no deadline for a
vote on the manpower issue, although
they reached time limitations on
some of the other controversial items
in the bill. Senate leaders hope to end
debate on the bill today.
Last week, Nunn insinuated
Alexander has allowed the Army to
become a job corps for the disad
vantaged.
Conservatives as well as liberals
said they agreed the quality of the
Army must be improved. But they
expressed doubts it could be done
with a drastic cut.
"I do not believe it can be achieved
by the sledgehammer approach,"
said Sen. Strom Thurmond, R-S.C., a
hawkish member of the Armed
Services Committee.
Sen. Ernest Hollings, D-S.C., spoke
loud and long against "destroying it
(the Army) in order to save it."
vast majority until we experience
first-hand the consequences of
drunken driving," Pell continued.
Pell's bill would require states, as a
condition of receiving federal
highway safety funds, to enact
minimum criminal penalties of 10
days' imprisonment or 10 days'
alternative community service for
any convicted drunken driver.
It also would require participation
in an alcohol treatment or safe
driving program.
States would be required to set a
minimum one-year suspension of
driver licenses for anyone convicted
of drunken driving two or more times
within a three-year period.
The legislation would require
improved state record systems to
better identify repeat offenders, and
maintain records to indicate whether
defendants actually comply with the
court-ordered sanctions.
nti-abortionists applaud, feminists denounce
Activists respond to court abortion decision
By United Press International
Many black leaders, feminists and family planners are
angry over Monday's U.S. Supreme Court decision
barring the use of federal funds to pay for most
abortions, claiming it discriminates against the poor.
Anti-abortion activists welcomed the ruling.
Critics say Monday's court action imposes a double
standard abortions for those who can pay; no
abortions for those who cannot.
"We maintain that if abortions are readily available
for the rich, they should be made available for the
poor," said National Association for the Advancement
of Colored People Executive Director Benjamin
Hooks
Janet Benshoof and Rhonda Copelon, attorneys for
the American Civil Liberties Union and the Center for
Constitutional Rights, said:
"The Supreme Court's decision . . . is a complete and
cruel abandonment of the constitutional guarantee of
equal justice.
"The court made clear that they will use a different
level of constitutional review for the rich and the poor.
"This is not the end of the battle for reproductive
freedom. Today's decision is a step on the road to
TAIN
ERICA
COMING
TO SAVE
THE DAY!
America's
super hero
in person
at Hills for
a super 4th
of July.
Captain America will be at
Hills July 4th from 2 - 5
pm and 7 - 9 pm. He'll
have free flags and
Captain America
pins for everyone.
Stop in for the
celebration. It'll be
a fun 4th at Hills.
We're the
Anti-Inflation
Department
Store.
placing every woman's right to abortion in jeopardy."
Karen Mulhauser, executive director of the National
Abortion Rights Action League, said: "We are
distressed that the court has chosen to show such
callous disregard for indigent women with problem
pregnancies."
'We maintain that if abortions are
readily available to the rich, they
should be made available for the
poor.'
Benjamin Hooks, NAACP
Executive Director
Rep. Henry Hyde, RAIL, whose name is on the
legislation that cut off using tax funds to pay for
abortions and started the court case that ended in
Monday's decision, praised the ruling and called for
continued congressional efforts to restrict abortion
funding."
State College: Hills Plaza-. )uth A. :rton Branch Rd
Store Hours: 10-10 Monday-Saturday/12-5 Sunday
r'~
~~1
"What today's decision really means is life fgr
countless unborn children, just as surely as
unrestricted abortion means death for them," Hyde
said.
Among the outraged, Faye Wattleton, first black
president of the Planned Parenthood Federation of
America, said:
"This is a travesty for poor women . . . placing their
health in jeopardy and their life in jeopardy. We
consider this an outrage in this country. The Supreme
Court decision is a national disgrace.",
Top Roman Catholic officials welcomed the decision
but warned that because it did not touch the issue of
legality of abortion itself, they would continue anus
intensify their efforts to pass a constitutional amend
ment that would forbid all abortions.
"I am grateful that millions of Americans who op
pose abortion and whose hard-earned tax monies
contribute to Medicaid will no longer have, to pay for
the destruction of human life," said Cardinal Terence
Cooke of New York, chairman of the National Con- e
ference of Catholic Bishops Committee for Pro-life
activities.
.„
. i•,1,4
..A .
... .
..':'l 1 f 4, ''' .
i ..- ly,
~,, ,:.
Iv. ...4,:;,;,i, •
\
440
•9
~, sf.:
fo r 4
.01 1 ,.
„. 1
0.,,
,
1
V Likao4"
.:CA.
t -
~. k- •-
..
%...•‘'''.-.6,,-
~. .
;~
M0 . a.".N.00a
s.4k,
... 4 .OWK : gOMI
WWI
Wrq
,Y 3
=MO
, 4 i 1
NEI
da4
4011eglan
Win7bledon records no match for Borg
WIMBLEDON England (AP) —Bjorn
'Borg set an alltime Wimbledon record
for consecutive singles victories
'yesterday whip the dream run of 'l5-
'year-old Andria Jaeger was halted
t decisively by Cris Evert Lloyd. '
- In defeating Balasz Taroczy of
Hungary 6-1, 7-i, 6-2 for his 32nd straight
'victory here, Eorg, who is going for his
'fifth consecutive title, snapped Rod
'Laver's record of 31 matches, spread
'over a decade. The Austral!an left
• hander won Wimbledon in 1961.0 d 1962,
' missed five years after turning/pro, then
came back when tennis went oPen to win
:again in 1968 and 1969. He won through
three rounds in 1970 before losing to
Britain's Roger Taylor.
"To beat Layer's record was my first
aim when I came here," said Borg, the
Fans select 4 injured American League stars
NEW YORK (AP) —Dodger fans will
have plenty of chancel' to root for the
home team at basebals All-Star Game
in Los Angeles next Ttesday night. Four
Dodgers second baseman Dave
Lopes, shortstop Ell Russell, first
baseman Steve Gar'ey and outfielder
Reggie Smith havi%been named to the
National League's stating lineup.
"Obviously, we have some out
standing players this team and the
fans have shown it ly the way they have
Britain's Coe sets new
track record in Oslo
OSLO, Nory4y (AP) Sebastian
Coe, Britain'monderboy, set a world
record for 1,60 meters with a time of
2 minutes, )3.40 seconds during an
international track and field meet
yesterday. I Meanwhile, fellow
countryman i Steve Ovett set a world
record in tle mile run by clocking
three mint, and 48.8 seconds,
smashing C?e's former record.
The 22-y?ar-old Coe cut a half
second off [he old record of 2:13.90,
set by Ricl Wohlhuter of the United
States in 176. •
Great Britain's Sebastion Coe is seen breaking the world record in the 1,000
meter race in ye;terday's Bislett Games in Oslo, Norway.
• WedpeSday—pizza quatro (w/olives,
i pepperoni, articokes and
mixed cheeses) $2.75
• Thin;Sday-2 slices of red stuffed pizza
i and regular salad $2.50
•Friday—swiss cheese and bacon
; calzone $2.25 .
4 r,
~.
~~;;. , A
opi college ave..
corner of college & heister
/ 237-5718
LUNCHEON SPECIALS
(7/2, 7/3 and 7/4)
No. 1 seed from Sweden. "I was deter
mined to do that first, and then to try to
win the title again, so I am very
pleased."
Thirteenth-seeded Wojtek Fibak of
Poland sprung the big upset in the men's
singles. He came from two sets down to
defeat No. 4 Vitas Gerulaitis 3-6, 4-6, 6-3,
6-3, 8-6 for a place in the quarterfinals.
John McEnroe, seeded to meet Borg in
the final, won his second tiebreaker of a
close match and completed a 7-5, 7-6, 7-6
success over Kevin Curren of South
Africa
No. 7 Peter Fleming, McEnroe's
doubles partner, beat Onny Parun of
New Zealand 6-3, 6-2, 6-7, 7-6. Parun was
one of the surprises of the tournament
because he came through the week-long
qualifying competition to get a place in
backed their club," said Tommy
Lasorda, who manages the Dodgers but
will surrender the dugout helm to Pitt
sburgh's Chuck Tanner for the 51st All-
Star contest.
The rest of the National League
starters, elected in fan balloting as
announced yesterday by Commissioner
Bowie Kuhn: Catcher Johnny Bench. of
the Cincinnati Reds, third baseman
Mike Schmidt of the Philadelphia
Phillies and outfielders Dave Parker of
Coe, who set world records for the
800, mile and 1,500 during an in
credible 41 days last summer,
covered the first 800 meters in 1.44.4,
and was 2.4 seconds ahead of
Wohlhuter's record pace.
Ovett smashed the world record in
the mile shortly after Coe had
cracked the world mark in the I,ooG
meter race.
The old record of 3:49.0 in the mile
run had been set by Coe a year ago
over the same track.
r!V al_
the draw.
Jaeger made a smiling exit from the
championships, her dream destroyed
but her spirits as bubbly as ever.
Lloyd played the 15-year-old prodigy
from Lincolnshire, 111., at her own game,
driving from baseline to baseline, and
thrashed her 6-1, 6-1 to reach the
semifinals
The little pony-tailed schoolgirl had
written her name firmly into the history
of Wimbledon. She was the youngest
player ever to be seeded (No. 14), the
youngest to reach the quarterfinals, and
Monday she defeated Virginia Wade, the
1977 champion, whose Wimbledon
career began before Andrea was born.
No. 2 Tracy Austin, a veteran by
comparison at 17, overcame the fierce
hitting of South Africa's Greer Stevens,
Pittsburgh and Dave Kingman of the
Chicago Cubs.
The Boston Red Sox have the most
starters (three) on the American League
team, one that hopes to break the NL's
eight-game winning streak. Outfielders
Fred Lynn and Jim Rice join catcher
Carlton Fisk as elected starters for the
AL, though Fisk continues to suffer
elbow miseries and Rice is on the
disabled list with an broken wrist.
Rice isn't the only disabled AL star.
Lady's soccer team sets
its sights on varsity status
By STEVE BOYER
Daily Collegian Staff Writer
According to the Washington Post, its
the country's fastest growing sport.
Jogging, right? Racquetball? Tennis?
All wrong. The Post says the winner is
. . . women's soccer!
And the women's team at the
University plays this oldest of games
quite well.
They've just returned from a suc
cessful tour of England, where they
defeated all of their British opponents.
The trip, financed by the players
themselves, began May 25 when they left
for London
According to a press release, all
matches were set up by the Women's
Football Association, based in London.
Head coach Tim Conley said the
competition was weak overall. They
defeated the Northwood Ladies' Football
Club by a score of 6-0. After a social in
London with the team, it was on to
Cambridge where they beat the Pye
Ladies' Football Club, 3-1. Next, the
team was off to Nottingham, where they
earned a victory over the Nottingham
County Ladies' Football Club, 5-0, the
release said.
Victories are not uncommon to the
women's team
Last fall the women went undefeated
in eight games against collegiate op
ponents, according to the press release.
THE RATHSKELLER
Appearing Wed. Chris Barrett
Thurs. Tom Casey
Fri. "J. B."
Come join us!
Corner of College and Pugh
a Trip journalist today.
seeded 11th, to win 6-3, 6-3. Evonne
Goolagong, No. 4, ousted No. 6 Wendy
Turnbull 6-3, 6-2 in an Australian duel
and will meet Austin in the semifinals.
Lloyd faces the winner of the Martina
Navratilova-Billie Jean King battle.
Navratilova, two-time defending
women's champion and top seed, closed
out a tiebreaker just before the rain and
led King 7-6.
The tournament committee set itself a
target of five men's singles and the
complete quarterfinals of the women's
singles yesterday in the hope of com
pleting the rain-plagued tournament by
Saturday as scheduled. By the time the
rain came back in the evening and ended
play for the day, only two matches were
unfinished.
Second baseman Paul Molitor of the
Milwaukee Brewers and third baseman
George Brett of the Kansas City Royals
also may be missing; Molitor has a
pulled muscle in his ribcage and Brett
has an injured ankle.
Also on the AL squad: first baseman
Rod Carew of the California Angels,
shortstop Bucky Dent of New York and
Yankee teammate Reggie Jackson, who
won the other outfield starting spot.
The leaflet said they were invited as
the only non-varsity squad to participate
in the first Eastern United States
Championships last fall. They finished
eighth in the competition.
This spring, the team went eight and
one against varsity and club teams.
Their only loss was in the finals of the
Big Red Tournament in Bloomington,
Ind.
The women's team at the University is
a club team. It has tried to acquire
varsity status, but has been turned
down, Conley said.
Conley played soccer at St. Louis
University, one of the top soccer schools '
in the country. He became the women's
soccer coach after a four-year stint as an
assistant to Walter Bahr, head coach of
the University's men's soccer team.
He said the women's soccer program
is growing at the University. In fact, all
of New England and parts of the west
are experiencing a tremendous growth
in the sport, he said.
Conley said any interested girls are
encouraged to stop by from 6 to 8 p.m. on
Wednesday or Saturday evenings at
Pollock athletic fields where the team
will be holding informal workouts.
Formal practice will begin the first week
of Fall Term. Anyone interested may get
in contact with Conely at his office in
room 9 Pattee.
MENEM
Chris Evert Lloyd in action at Wimbledon where she defeated fellow American
Andrea Jaeger in straight sets yesterday.
UNIVERSITY CALENDAR
Wednesday-Sunday, July 2-6
Wednesday, July 2
University Libraries orientation tours: Pattee 9 and 11 a.m., 1, 3 and 7 p.m.;
Branches undergraduate students, 10 a.m., graduate students, 2 p.m.
Commons Concert, Dan Johnson, noon, Kern Lobby.
Shaver's Creek Nature Center, examination of insects at Civil Engineering
Camp with Charles Rutschky, entomology, 7:30 p.m., Stone Valey.
Festival Theatre, The Good Doctor, 8 p.m., The Pavilion Theatre; Pal Joey, 8
p.m., The Playhouse.
Thursday, July 3
University Libraries orientation tours: Pattee 9 and 11 a.m., 1 and 3 p.m.;
• Branches— undergraduate students, 10 a.m., graduate students, 2 p.m.
Phi Delta Kappa/College of Education Summer Lecture Series, .110.0 a.m.,
Room 112 Kern. Dr. Robert C.' Scanlon, Pa., Secretary of Educaann, on
"School Improvement; Higher' EduCation's Challenge."
Festival Theatre, The Good Doctor, 8 p.m., The Pavilion Theatre; Pal Joey, 8
p.m., The Playhouse.
Friday, July 4
Independence Day. No classes, University offices closed.
Interlandia, folk dancing, 7:30-11 p.m., HUB Ballroom patio.
Festival Theatre, The Good Doctor, 8 p.m., The Pavilion Theatre; Pal Joey, 8
p.m., The Playhouse.
Saturday, July 5
Shaver's Creek Nature Center, children's program, 9:30-11:30 a.m., Stone
Valley. 865-1851 for information.
Opening reception for Sidney Goodman exhibit, 3-5 p.m., Museum of Art.
Festival Theatre, The Good Doctor, 8 p.m., The Pavilion Theatre; Pal Joey, 8
p.m., The Playhouse.
Sunday, July 6
PSOC Bike Division, all day tour, Huntingdon County, 9:30 a.m., HUB Terrace
parking lot.
CPFA Gala, 7-9 p.m., Museum of Art.
Festival Theatre, The Good Doctor, 8 p.m., The Pavilion Theatre; Pal Joey, 8
p.m., The Playhouse.
oe mosomee••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••eso
e
•
•
•
•
• di .
•
• ilk
•
•
•
:
The
•
World's
•
Toughest
Lens!
•
••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••
•
State College
234-1040
•
•••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••0000•0•••••••
SPECIAL EVENTS
:
"Super Lens "
LENSES! i
Your active child deserves :
the best protection and
vision accuracy, and •
the revolutionary :
"Super Lens" lens :
delivers both. This :
lightweight lens
will not chip or :
shatter, and a :
special coating :
makes it scratch :
resistant. For :
.."your superstar, :
insist on the "Super •
/ydi Lens" lens: the :
/
world's toughest!
•
•
•
•
•
•
$45 :,
(complete with plastic :
frame and case) :
*sae \
Wise Eyes
Optical Center •
Bellefonte Clearfield
355-1354 765-1192
union discount cards honored
Wednesday, July 2 5
MAKE SURE
HE'S WEARING
Lewistown
242-1915
UPI wlrephoto