-The Daily Collegian Wednesday Nov. 5,1980 News briefs Manson denied parole again VACAVILLE, Calif. (UPI) - Convicted mass murderer Charles Manson, who now works in a prison chapel after spending 10 years in solitary confinement, was denied parole yesterday for the third straight time. Manson, imprisoned for master minding nine gruesome killings in 1969, appeared before the three member panel of the Board of Prison terms, which turned down his automatic appeal for a release date. Officials at the California Medical Facility say Manson during the past year has taken a steady job, has a better attitude and a good disciplinary record. However, the prison’s most notorious inmate was not considered ready to return to society. Twice before, in 1978 and 1979, Women testify in murder trial WEST CHESTER (AP) A Chester County woman and her daughter testified yesterday that they saw two young men several weeks after the prosecution contends the men were killed by Bruce Johnston Sr. in 1978. Johnston, 42, of Elkton, Md., is charged with six murders, fivq of which occurred in 1978 when the prosecution contends Johnston and his two brothers were trying to prevent disclosure of a burglary ring they allegedly headed. Marie Parncutt and her daughter Eva, 15. both of Cochranville, testified they were on their way to a family picnic Sept. 4, 1978, when they passed by another car driven by Bomb hits Swiss courthouse GENEVA, Switzerland (UPI) A time bomb planted by an Armenian liberation group exploded yesterday in Geneva’s main courthouse, causing extensive damage to the ancient building. Police said a female passer-by was slightly injured by flying glass but the Palace of Justice had its doors and windows blown out by the blast. The building was evacuated and federal investigators were flow in from Bern to investigate. A man speaking French with a heavy accent made anonymous telephone calls to news agencies and local Swiss newspapers shortly after the mid-afternoon explosion, .saying the bomb had been planted by the Saturn moon naming delayed PASADENA, Calif. (UPI) The two hew Saturian moons discovered by Voyager One last month cannot be named before scientists from around the world meet to make a joint decision on the matter, scientists said yesterday. Until that time, the two satellites, which bring the total number of known moons circling the ringed planet to 14, will be known simply as S-13 and S-14, a Jet Propulsion Laboratory spokesman said. . The spokesman, Don Bane, said scientists believe Voyager will discover a number of additional moons before its mission ends. “That place is just loaded and they expect that several more will be detected,” Bane said. Voyager imaging team leader Brad Smith said the moons will be named provisionally by a task group for the outer solar system of the In- Israel wants cultists to leave JERUSALEM (AP) Israel’s interior minister yesterday rejected a plan to legalize the residence in Israel of about 1.500 black Americans belonging to a Peoples Temple-like cult and said the government would “try to convince them” to leave. The black Hebrews, who began moving to Israel 12 years ago claiming they were direct descen dants of the ancient Israelites, live in packed housing blocks in several southern Israeli towns. "I believe we have to explain to them they are living in absolute danger that the innocent ones could be exploited as was the case in the famous Jonestown in Guyana,” In terior Minister Yosef Burg told Israel Radio. A parliamentary commission Illinois children vote for deer CHICAGO (AP) Despite a write in campaign for the skunk, the white tailed deer was the projected winner yesterday as public school children throughout Illinois voted for an of ficial state animal. An unofficial sampling of votes by The Associated Press gave the deer the early lead in balloting conducted Monday and yesterday. Final results won’t be known until late November. The big vote for the deer came as no surprise to 48-year-old Bill Stanton, who distributed 2,000 pieces of campaign literature on the virtues of the skunk. “This time of year the little kids are thinking about Santa’s reindeer and this has influenced the vote. I think parole was denied the bearded, long haired leader of the bloody drug and sex cult known as the Manson Family. He was sentenced to death in 1971 for ordering the murders of nine people in Los Angeles. The Board of Prison Terms has deemed unsuitable for parole all six of the cultists convicted of shooting, stabbing and bludgeoning actress Sharon Tate and four others and later killing grocery executive Leno Laßianca and his wife Rosemary. Manson also was found guilty of two other killings. Manson, 45, convicted of ordering his followers to commit the “helter skelter” murders he hoped would set off a race war, became eligible for parole under California law in December 1978. Thereafter, he was to be given an annual parole hearing, under the law. James Sampson, 24. James Johnston, 18, was a passenger and two unidentified people were in the back seat, the women said. The prosecution contends that James Johnston, the defendant’s stepson, was killed Aug. 16,1978, and buried with Duane Lincoln, 17, and Wayne Sampson, 20, in a remote common grave in the woods near Chadds Ford. James Sampson was allegedly killed Aug. 21, 1978, but his body has never been recovered from a landfill where he is supposedly buried. “When we went past them, I knew it was them,” said Eva Parncutt, who was Duane Lincoln’s girlfriend at the time of the murders. Oct. 3 Movement Police said the bomb, linked to a timing device, was placed inside a suitcase placed outside the second floor office of the city’s public prosecutor. The same mysterious group also claimed responsibility for similar attacks last month on Swiss offices in London and Paris. Swiss police said they believe the movement is linked to the arrest in Geneva on Oct. 3 of two Armenians who were injured while constructing a bomb in a downtown hotel room. The two. a man and a woman, have so far have not been indentified by police but spokesmen said they both are of Armenian origin. ternalional Astronomical Union. The task group will meet in Bath, England, in April 1981. The chairmen of the task groups for planetary systems nomenclature are part of a larger working group of the lAU. The working group will submit the names to an executive committee of the lAU but the formal naming of the moons will not come until the lAU meets in Greece in August 1982. “The Saturn satellites are named for a group of titans and giants from mythology,” Smith said, “and whether that happened by intent to accident we don’t know. Some of them were named as early as the 17th Century.” The names to be given to the newly discovered moons, including two sighted from Earth in 1966 but only recently confimed by Voyager, will follow that pattern. recommended that the black Hebrews be permitted to set up an agricultural settlement in the Negev Desert and apply for citizenship after five years. In a speech to the Knesset, the Israeli Parliament, Burg rejected the proposal, saying the cult had cir culated anti-Israeli propaganda in the United States and w.as dangerously unstable. The commission was set up after about 900 members of the Peoples Temple sect committed mass suicide and murder in the jungle of Guyana in November 1978. “I am against formal expulsion,” Burg told Israel Radio. “I think we should try to convince them to leave.” it’s unfair," said Stanton, who drives a “skunkmobile" with a public ad dress system heralding his Poll-Cat Party. The statewide sampling gave the deer 35 percent to 27 percent for its closest challenger, the raccoon. Of 19,176 votes tallied, the deer got 6,658, raccoon 5,313, red fox 3,792, fox squirrel 1,967, ground squirrel 787 and opossum 659. The skunk got only 16 votes as a write-in candidate. At suburban Forest View Elementary School, a teacher read a story to the class about a raccoon and all the pupils later voted for 'it. “Shows how a commercial can in fluence the vote," laughed Principal Don Heitzman. Printed below is the conflict final examination schedule for Fall 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 originally published schedule. The Interpretation of the time designations used in the con flict final examination period schedule is as follows: Accountlm irlcultural Economica (AC EC' V 10U0 U Frgn irlcultural Em T 12:20 206 Ag t ou Agronomy fACBO' Appc OM H 10:10 11 Frga ASI Animal Nutrition V lOilO 111 AI 040 Appt 043 031 042.1 070 ictance (AX SC' logy (akihy: 001.1 001.2-6 T 8:00 107 CRCB 001 T 10:10 107 CRCB 108.2 Irchltectui Art (ART) 120 Arta. The IARTS' 100 itronoay (ASTRO' T 10:10 *ppt B 10:10 Biological Sc: ice (Bt SC' T 10:10 Biology (BIOLI Oil 012 022 (Ml 441 472 T 10:10 8 Huelr _ T 10:10 250 t B ( E ic) W 10:10 111 Huelr • H 12:20 111 Huelr 105 *** Kuelr gieetrieai Engineering (E El Bualneaa Administration (B A' OFFICE OF THE UNIVERSITY REGISTRAR ANNOUNCES THE FALL TERM 1980 CONFLICT FINAL EXAMINATION SCHEDULE M—Monday, November 17, 1980 T---Tuesday, November 18, 1980 W--Wednesday, November 19, 1980 Th—Thursday, November 20, 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.ml 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. ROOK COURSE Bualneaa Lav ta«_ Logladca Chctalatrv (CHI '.ye Ltteracure (C LIT! Computer 3e: 101 uo 203 402 Dairy Science (DSC 331 Economic* (ECOW 002.1 002.2 002.6-17 302.1,2,4,3 304.1 304.2 323.1.2 333 342 111 Muclr 3jj t i 331!2,3 390 443 D L A Kuelr ton of Excel 031 068 220 *25 438 \ vote for Arby’s s a vote for • 03S mcriras 2ls JIJIiAUJL AmMwLMLmJm® 2£e 8 *r Nov - ,5> ,98 °- Bo,hS,ate ■ f Arby’s® Original 5 m Roast Beef Sandwich g§ ROOM COURSE Appt 100 H 4:40 308 qoucka 100 T 10:10 308 Boucke H 8:00 308 Boucko “j 216 401 Appt Appt Appt U 10110 113 0 L Appt Entomology-(ENT! Environmental Reaource Hanagenent V Bioo 106 Sac ... T 2i30 106 See 11 ' riqcnc. (Pin? H lOilO 106 Sac 105 Trench (ml 001 Oil 430 T 2:30 169 Vll Caoaclence fCEOSC Appt W 2:30 265 Wll *PPC Ml 432 Ccraao ICER) 001 004 Appt Appt T 12:20 Appt Appt Appt Appt Appt Appt Appt ' tf 2:30 Appt ptlonal Child: 265 Mil Health Rlannlni (H f A) 450 440 171 Vll History (HIST) 021.2 021.4,5 Hone Economli Appt Appe W lOilO 203 EE V Individual and Famll' Appt " Appt 31S Appt Students with conflict examination schedules may obtain a copy of the assignment form at the Office of the University Registrar, Room 110 Shields Building. If, for any reason, an instructor has not received notification of the' students assigned to the conflict examination, the student's copy of the conflict exami nation request and assignment form may. be used to certify that he 'has been assigned to the conflict examination(s) thereon indicated. * ' The time and place of a conflict examination for courses list ed by appointment (Appt) should be arranged between the students and the Instructors concerned at a mutually convenient time, but in no case in conflict with any other regularly scheduled final examination, or at a time which would createjthree final examinations on the same day for any student. ! . TIME ROOM leering Mechanics H 10.10 206 B B W 8:00 206 H B W 12:20 206 R B 101 Appt Appt U 2:30 204 P B IS Sparks IS Sparks Appt Appt Appt Appt U 10:10 14 Sparks 007 Appt " 410 th Education and Administration lucatlon Studies (I F S' S-'V $195 S o V 3 e , B EH f nr ■ WITH THIS SI M 11 sg Offer good thru Nov. 15, .1980. Both State ra f T 9 \ M College Arby’s; M i#js ■ S32K2U i :/> s = ; I pan Trim H " tor " COUPON •—•> 11 >1 I 5 m Offer good thru Nov. 15, 1980. Both State .jp & Delicious, fjhhlbhusi ■ aaaaaaaiji No gristle, a Arby’s® Super ■: No surprises. H Roast Beef Sandwich a No Sir! I $139 save « It’s America’s a X for A sscar « Roast Reef m Offer good thru Nov. 15, 1980. Both State ga - ns College Arby’s r-b m fj TIME BOOH Industrial Enslneerlni T 4)40 206 It ran T 22i20 206 H B Appt iternatlona) Italian (IT) 001.1,2 Karketlm ihematlcs (MATH' K 4:40 Appt Appt Appt V 8:00 Appt Appt T 4:40 t 4:40 T 10:10 T 4:40 Appt Appt Mechanic* Sociology (50C1 V 2i30 103 K E 001.4-9 i 007 013 M 10:10 S2FI T 10:10 S 2 P B 0,5 t 10:10 366 F B j Icroblology fHICRB' ! (KN PR) 001 002.3 W 10:10 101 Walker oil *76 Mineral Processln* Music (MUSIC! 003 Hutrltlon M 12:20 H 12:20 M 12:20 Appt W 10:10 follosopln H *:*o 13 Spark. Appt 408 emore reasons ~ h why You & 1 iove Arbys: §p a sa n-« m m ja m ® ® a a m © a Arby’s® Original « m- R t Beef Sandwich m | Arhy’s® Super OR 5 ® Beef ’N Cheddar Platter m a X $lB9 s | v s e « " ® I ffk|« I WITH THIS ® jgg -JkL. I UI M COUPON ra Offer good thru Nov. 15, 1980. Both State [RJ “ College Arby’s “* 5 Arby’s® Original g m Roast Beef Platter | S 1 $159 l S 3 B fftl* B WITH THIS . -JfL iUI ML coupon S 3 ew sn Offer good thru Nov. 15, 1980. Both State ira 6a College Arby’s M © 1900 ARBY'S INC. COURSE I TIME ROOH teal Education Phyalca 7PHVS) 203 ' 263 Political Scl«ne« (PL SC! Psychology/ fPST). 121 I Appt ' H 4:40 250 Hoore ; *ppe j Appt 102 M B intltaeiva Bualnei (0 B A) 102.3 103 102 H B Beal Eata'ti 102 K B 103 H B 102 H B 104 H B Russian fRPsy 001 Statistics (STAT' 402 I E 212 H Dev 427 i E2ll H Dev E 214 H Dev Theatre Area 204 U Dev 1 I ! Appe Appt T 6:50 104 0 L H 12:20 167 Ull H 2:30 171 Ull, Appt T 2:30! 151 Ull Appt Appt Appt Appt Appt Appt Appt Appt Appt T 2:30 167 Ull M 12:20 151 Ull Appt Appt Appt ■ K 6:50 174 Ull M 10:10 E A Hostages not to be sent ito Frankfurt if released f; £■; y I I WIESBADEN, West Germany j(UPI) West Germany’s, am bassador to Iran said in an interview published yesterday the release of the •American hostages was “at least 10 Idays away” and they will not be Ibrought to Frankfurt because of the Ihordes of reporters waiting for them. ; Ambassador Gerhard Ritzel, who •met with Iranian Premier Moham mad Ali Rajai on Monday, told the Berlin newspaper Der Abend that reports the 52 hostages would be flown first to Frankfurt upon their Release were “thin rumors.” ; He indicated that Frankfurt, where preparations to receive the hostages were visibly under way, was one of the places that had been considered as a stopover point. ; “More than 200 journalists have gathered on the basis of thin rumors, which has made a transport to Frankfurt impossible,” Ritzel was quoted assaying. i >.i i ! I I 1 H 1 1 i . He added the release of the hostages, now in their 367th day of captivity, was "at least- 10 days away," but did not elaborate. Nevertheless, preparations to receive the hostages at the U.S. Air CONTACT LENSES SOFT $9B HARD $65 INCLUDES: • EXAMINATION • CONTACT LENSES • ACCESSORIES • 50% 60-DAY SATISFACTION WARRANTY DR. ANDREW BLENDER OPTOMETRIST 242 Calder Way 234-1515 ‘J j i: * » i il. UNIVERSITY CALENDAR Wednesday, Nov. 5 Faculty Women’s Club Brown Bag Lunch 11:45 p.m., Faculty Bldg. Interlandia, folkdance performance, noon, Kern Lobby. • Alard String Quartet recital, 12:45 p.m., Room 112 Kern. Colloquy lecture, 2 p.m., HUB Main Lounge. Greg Breon, Merrill Lynch, on “Stocks, Bonds and Investing.” Black Film Series, Gone Are the Days, 7:30 p.m., Robeson Center. French lecture, 7:30 p.m., Room 305 HUB. Jean-Pierre Descles, Univ. of Paris, on “l’Organisation du langage humain apprehende a travers les langues naturelles.” University Readers, Brecht, Socrates Wounded, 7:30 p.m., Room 112 Kern URTC, Sly Fox, 8 p.m., The Playhouse. Yachad lecture, 8 p.m., Room 111 Boucke. Y. Ramati, L’Am, on “Middle East Update.” Penn State Symphonic Wind Ensemble, 8:30 p.m., Music Bldg. Recital Hall. Noon Network meeting, noon, Spruce Cottage, Sue Johnson on “Stress, as Related to Nutrition and Diet.” Chess Club meeting. 7 p.m., Room 307 HUB Accounting Club/Beta Alpha Psi, 7:30 p.m., Room S-209 Henderson. Ernest Wood, Arthur Young & Co., on “Opportunities in Tax Accounting.” Dairy Science Club, 7:30 p.m., Room 201 Borland. Froth, 7:30 p.m., Room 308 Boucke. Model RR Club; 7:30 p.m., Room 312 Boucke. Nittany Grotto, 7:30 p.m., Room 217 Willard. PSOC, Ski Division, 7:30 p.m., Room 119 Osmond. Real Estate Club, 7:30 p.m., Room 304 Boucke. Baha’i Fireside, 8 p.m., Room 211 Eisenhower Chapel. Equestrian Team, 8 p.m., Room 119 Boucke. Vet’s Organization, 8 p.m., Vet’s House. Aikido Club, 8:30 p.m., IM Wrestling Room. Thursday, Nov. 6 Board of Trustees meeting, Keller Bldg. CDPC Seminars: “Looking for a Job,” 3rd period; “Choosing a Major,” 4th period; “Interview Skills,” sth period; “Resume Preparation,” 6th period, Room 321 Boucke. *Kern/WPSX-TV, Cosmos series, “Traveller’s Tales," noon, Kern Lobby. ASEE lecture, 12:30 p.m., Room 101 Kern. William S. Adams, electric engineer ing, on “An Overview of Interactive Computing at Penn State.” FSHA 410, Polynesian dinner, Maple Room. Reservations, 865-1736, 8 a.m.-5 p.m. Cinamatheque, Last Tango in Paris, 6:30 and 9 p.m., HUB Assembly Hall. University Readers, Socrates Wounded, 7:30 p.m., Room 112 Kern. s Leadership Skills Workshop, 8 p.m., Room 305 HUB. Phil Stebbins, history, on “Organizational Creativity.” URTC, Sly Fox, 8 p.m., The Playhouse. DWS meeting, 6 p.m., Room 306 Boucke, Phi Mu Alpha Sinfonia, 6 p.m., Room 117 Music Bldg. Orienteering Club, 6:30 p.m., Room 212 Wagner. ASME, Perspectives on Employment, 7 p.m., Room 215 Hammond, Delta Sigma Pi, 7 p.m., Room 311 Boucke. * Entomology Assoc., 7 p.m., Room 207 Patterson. Society of Student Social Workers, 7 p.m., Room 76 Willard. AIIE, 7:30 p.m., Kunkle Center (Fishbowl). NAMA, 7:30 p.m., Room 301 Ag. Admin. Bldg. PSORML, 8 p.m., Room 173 Willard. Campus Bible Fellowship, 8:30 p.m., Room 314 Boucke. SPECIAL EVENTS Force hospital in Wiesbaden near Frankfurt were continuing. A wing was set aside at the hospital and equiped with beds, special telephones and clothes, including name-tagged uniforms. Military medics, flight crews and psychiatrists were awaiting- the hostages’ arrival. The 14 hostages released from Iran since last Nov. 4 were flown to the Rhine-Main Air Base at Frankfurt and then bussed the 25 miles west to Wiesbaden to rest and undergo physical and psychiatric examinations. Betting the scenario would be repeated for the remaining hostages, some 200 reporters have flocked to Frankfurt over the past 10 days. U.S. and international television networks have laid miles of cable, built camera stands and lined up transmission vans outside the hospital, linking them via microwave to the impromptu communications center tlie airport hotel in Frankfurt, But U.S. officials cautioned that West Germany was only one of several places the hostages many be sent, Iraq offers to withdraw troops from Iran BAGHDAD, Iraq (UPI) Iraqi President Saddam Hussein, saying he is prepared for a long war, offered yesterday to withdraw iiis' troops from Iran “tomorrow” if Tehran fully recognizes Baghdad’s territorial claims. Iraq’s state-run news agency said Hussein told the national assembly that if Iran rejected the proposal. “Iraq will be ready for a long war . . . until our enemy says‘yes’and yields to our rights.” Iran has stated it is not prepared to accept mediation in the 44-day-old war until Iraqi forces withdraw en tirely. Iraq’s defense minister said in a newspaper in terview that Iraqi forces "annihilated” an Iranian brigade that tried to break out of encircled Abadan, site of the largest oil refinery in the Middle East. An Iranian brigade used to contain about 4,500 men. Iran’s official Pars news agency countered with a claim that the bodies of 300 Iraqi soldiers were decomposing in the desert around Dizful, a pipeline center, after Iranian forces wiped out an entire motorized division, killing 550 enemy troops last Friday. In a later report, Pars said an Iranian counterattack at Abadan had destroyed two temporary bridges set up Penn Alto Bottling Works, Inc. Altoona, Pa Win instant cosh and prizes. Take it off. If your next Pepsi’ has a star on its cap, go ahead... take it off! Take it off, and you've got a chance to win one of thousands of prizes. It's the Pepsi Pay-Off Game Just peel back and enjoy the show. Go on. peel back a cap liner and take a peek. You might win a TV. Peel another, maybe you'll find a new bike. Don't stop now. You could even peel yourself some instant cash. JjfejDgXjXT) (S)(P)(T)(rxj)0 by Iraqi forces across the Bahmanshir River that skirts Abadan and Iraqi military equipment was “littered along the course and banks of the river.” Iranian officials claimed to have killed 100 Iraqi soldiers in the previous 24 hours but said Abadan’s “residential areas came under Iraqi long-range ar tillery fire again today,” suffering "a number" of casualties. The battle for control of nearby Khuninshahr the former Khurramshahr renamed "city of blood” by Iran also continued, Pars said, with Iranian forces preventing an Iraqi advance into the eastern part of the city and inflicting “heavy losses” on Iraqis oc cupying the rest. The Iraqi news agency reported Hussein offered to withdraw Iraq's forces from Iran and end the Persian Gulf War “as of tomorrow in return for full recognition of its rights,” including full control of the Shatt al-Arab waterway and some territories Baghdad said Iran “usurped” during the regime of the late shah. Hussein said Iraq had enough weapons and spare parts on hand and had “friends who could supply it with weapons and spare parts, despite the fact that what we have now is sufficient.” Foreign ministers of six non-aligned nations trying to Play Pepsi Pay-off. ANNIVERSARY SALE up to 50% OFF on selected items (Sale at Both Stori WIN $500!! Some Pepsi Pay-Off caps have letters underneath. If the caps you collect spell out PEPSI SPIRIT, you win yourself $5001! \toid where prohibited. No purchase necessary. Available now through. Prices can only be won with caps Iha'l have stars printed on them end the war announced in Belgrade, Yugoslavia, they were ready to travel to [ran and Iraq. All India Radio later reported that Iraq had formally accepted the initiative of the “goodwill committee" of Cuba, India. Pakistan, the Palestine Liberation Organization. Zambia and Yugoslavia. No date was set fora visit to Baghdad. However, the radio said Iran rejected any mediation and an Iranian foreign ministry statement said a ceasefire would be meaningless. In Tehran, the Red Crescent Society, the equivalent of the Red Cross, demanded the release of Oil Minister Jawad BaqirTuguyan, whom the Iraqis captured in an ambush Friday and took as a “prisoner of war.” Without mentioning that Iran has held 52 American civilians hostage for a year, the official Pars news agency said “capturing or kidnaping civilians in the battle area (is) contrary to all international codes of conduct." It said Iraq should expect nothing in ex change for his release. Hussein’s statements followed claims of major victories by both sides as battles continued for control of oil industry centers and Iranian communiques spoke of wide-ranging Iranian air attacks both inside Iraq and against Iraqi troops in Iran. Get in the act. Just go down to any participating store for your Pepsi Pay-Off caps and check out the display for all the details. Play Pepsi Pay-Off. And peel yourself a winner! 'Also available on. Diet Pepsi Mountain Dew Pops! 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