4—The Daily Collegian Monday, March 23, 1981 Rain quenches Southeast fires By DENISE BRAZIEL Associated Press Writer Severe weekend thunderstorms pounding the eastern Gulf Coast finally quenched a 600-mile line of forest and brush fires that have destroyed more than 500,000 acres of timber and brushland from Louisiana to Florida so far this year. • Storms moving off the Gulf of Mexico dumped heavy rains on the Florida Panhandle yesterday morning and later moved across central Florida. Earlier yesterday the storms hit the central Gulf Coast. More than than half a million acres have gone up in flames in the Southeast this year as the result of a severe drought, dried debris from 1979's Hurricane Frederic and arson. Officials in the fire-ravaged Southeast have issued stern warnings to arsonists as this year's forest fires destroyed more than a half-million acres in four states, far surpassing the total damage from fires in 1980. Fires raged Saturday in thick pine timberland, brushland and marshes of the Mississippi Gulf Coast, Florida, Louisiana and Alabama despite baris on open-air burning. At least a half-dozen people have been arrested on arson charges in Florida, and officials said "several arrests" were possible in connection with fires on the Mississippi Gulf Coast. "It was as bad as they've been telling, and worse in some cases," said Dwight Munday, a pilot for the Mississippi Forestry Commission. "If you can imagine, I could see from the airplane a line (of fires) about 15 miles from the coast, from Alabama to Louisiana." • "Many of these fires are arson . . . around half are deliberately set," said Paul Wills of the Florida Division of Forestry. "Some are set through bad motives and some through curiosity." An average of 100 new fires started in Florida each day last week more than half of which are believed to have been deliberately set, Wills said. "Throughout the whole state (on Saturday), 103 new fires broke out in different places and burned 3,131 acres prior to the rain moving in," Wills said. "Fifty-three of those 103 we think were deliberately set with malicious intent to burn, • to see the firefighters scramble. It's been true all week long," Wills said. Fires earlier this week near Jacksonville threatened buildings and homes, as did the fire that nearly ‘ :. . „_.......... 1 1 ''•,..-:, ---.....,•• •,•••• --, ,•••• .•.....!•:;•:.-;;..,•.,:. . • mo ve to to g h e t to .._ ~. ... Chicago By BRENDA INGERSOLL Associated Press Writer CHICAGO (AP) Mayor Jane M. Byrne says she and her husband are moving from their posh Gold Coast apartment to live in another high-rise a crime-plagued, gang-infested public housing project called Cabrini Green. The mayor says she will live 'there for "as long as it takes to clean it up." In a nine-week period this year, 10 people were killed, at least 35 were wounded and over 50 firearms were confiscated at Cabrini Green, where police say rival gangs are warring for control of drug trafficking and prostitution, and where gangs routinely shake down tenants for "protection" money. Deliverymen, cab drivers and many citizens avoid Cabrini Green, a sprawling, 70-acre housing project on the. Near North Side that is home to 15,000 people. Last week, a 28-man police task force was assigned to the troubled complex of 81 high-rise brick buildings and rowhouses, where gunfire is a frequent occurrence. The mayor announced . Saturday night that she and her husband and political adviser, Jay McMullen, will move temporarily to Cabrini Green within two weeks. Byrne's announcement, which apparently took police by surprise, said: "I really can't believe that 10 blocks from me is any different from the people who live in the high-rise here." The mayor routinely has full-time protection by several police officers, News Briefs W. Germany warns of U.S. trade wars PRINCETON, N.J. (AP) West Germany cautioned the Reagan ad mistration on Saturday that blocking imports of foreign cars could touch off a trade war among the allied countries. "The free exchange of goods and services must remain an integral part of the West's free market order,". Economics Minister Otto Graf Lamb sdorff said. He spoke to a conference on U.S.- German relations here after talks in Washington. Any move to , protect the American auto. industry by blocking imports, which have gained a big share of the U.S. market, is likely to lead to retaliation, Lambsdorff said. But he gave a little ground by acknowledging that sometimes tem porary restraints on trade are in dispensable. "overran" the small Panhandle town of White City in Gulf County, Wills said. He said White City residents were moved out of danger and no injuries were reported. Along the Mississippi Gulf Coast rains brought forest fires under control yesterday while authorities contined to search for people they say are respon sible for setting many of the blazes. Forestry commission firefighters, National Guardsmen, U.S. Forest Service personnel and volunteers battled 217 fires in Mississippi on Friday which destroyed 9,793 acres of timber. Munday, the chief pilot for the Mississippi Forestry Commission who was responsible for plotting the hun dreds of fires in the area last week, said yestdrday that all the coast fires had been brought under control. Unofficial figures showed that only 500 to 600 acres burned in the coastal district on Saturday, said Bill Colvin, spokesman for the state Forestry Commission. • Forest fire alerts were canceled yesterday morning in Alabama after heavy rains and thunderstorms dumped up to two inches of rain over parts of the state, including the southwest corner, which was under an emergency drought order. Forestry Commission spokesman Frank Sego said, "Fires since Jan. 1 have burned more than 213,000 acres, far above the total for all of 1980. The fires have an economic impact of more than $B7 million dollars." Despite the widespread destruction of commercial timberland valued in the millions of dollars, an industry spokesman said the fires have had little impact on the lumber business because housing starts are down. More than 205,000 acres in Alabama have burned so far this year, already topping .1980's year-long total of 116,000 acres. While the northeast part of the state . is under a fire alert, nine counties in the south have been declared drought areas. The declaration means penalties will be imposed against open-air burning in forests, grasslands, wildlands, marshes or trash. Setting campfires and bonfires also is punishable by a maximum fine of $5OO and six months in jail. In Louisiana, during the first 19 days of this March, 1,386 fires burned 24,833 - acres. Byrne says she wants to put stop to crime there who accompany her wherever she goes and protect her home. Some project residents were heartened by their prospective new neighbor. Frances Stephens, who lives at Cabrini with her six children, said: "Everybody's kind of excited about the mayor's coming. They think maybe there'll be less trouble and maybe they'll find out who's causing the problems and evict them." Stephens also said, "I would love it if she moved into my building, so she can see some of the things that go on here, the garbage on the ramps and the broken elevators and the stopped up incinerators with the rats climbing up out of them." Fifteen-year Cabrini resident Mary Vinson:4s, said: "I'd like to meet the West Germany and Japan have cut into the American market with small and fuel-efficient cars. Their sales here helped spur gigantic economic progress at home since World War 11. The German minister suggested troubled industries rely on private initiative "instead of cries for govern ment intervention." He said they should be willing to ac cept risks instead of requesting sub sidies. Inside the Reagan administration, a debate is underway on whether to raise barriers against foreign cars. American manufacturers have just gone through their worst financial period in history. "The most important thing," Lamb sdorff said, "is to spread the awareness that the countries of the alliance I am including Japan here are all in the same boat in terms of their eonomies. "Attempts to solve indigenous problems unilaterally, or in opposition to other trade partners, are from the start probably doomed to failure." Cosmonauts off MOSCOW (AP) The Soviet Union sent a Mongolian cosmonaut and his Soviet commander into space yesterday aboard the Soyuz-39 capsule. The new team will link up with two Soviet cosmonauts launched March 12 who are circling the earth aboard the Salyut-6 space station. The new travelers to Salyut-6 were identified as Vladimir Dzhanibekov, the 38-year-old commander on his second spaCe mission, and 33-year old Jugderdemidiyn Gurragcha, a Mongolian who had been training for the space shot since 1978. ......_ . .. .. . .. ~ , .. „ ...... _ , ~..........,.......• .. .., . ••• •... '"" .. • •• '.. •.' .• ..• ' •... . -'• '''' •''.. . • . -•' . i .. .' .. ' . .. , . . .. . ~ „ . ~ .. .•. . - , .. . _ ... , • • .„ . , . . . . ~. • ~... , ~. . ... . ... • „ • .... .. .. - .• . , .. , ~ • ... .. .. .. ~ . - - . .... • .. . . . . . • _ . . . ~. .. ••.' " ••. • •••• • .• .•...'.• ...•' •... ;., •• ~ , .' .• .. • .".' . ~. . . . . . ....,.. . • . , •, . . ... . . . . , .. . . • . . . • . • „ . • ' • "• • • • " - •••••••• . - daily-. - •.. • ....-.. .. ....„ ........• .... mayor. Her coming here, it might help. But I'm not sure. I don't want to get my hopes up." Byrne said her decision was not intended to "be dramatic." She added, "I was out there at 4:45 p.m. and I saw a 14-year-old girl sitting in a squad car who'd just been raped. It's going to stop. "I have been up and down those streets 15 times in the last 15 days and 'l'm not doing this for Police say most tenants live in fear votes. There are people because of some 75 to 100 • troublemakers who are among an out there who have a estimated 600 gang members at right to a decent living.' Cabrini Green. There has been a resurgence of gang warfare, police —Jane M. Byrne, say, over narcotics and prostitution. Police intelligence reports say the mayor of Chicago largest gang at Cabrini is the Black Gangster Disciple Nation,, led by a convicted murderer now in prison. UPI Wirephoto I don't know why things don't work there. I'm not doing this for votes. There are people out there who have a right to a decent living." Chicago Police Superintendent Richard J. Brzeczek seemed taken aback by the annoucement. "I don't know anything about this," he said. "I don't know (if the move is safe). I haven't thought about that. Talk to Abortion operation induces baby's birth PHOENIX, Ariz. (AP) An infant girl born while doctors unwittingly tried to perform an abortion on a woman about eight months' pregnant was "stabilized and . . . doing fine," hospital officials said yesterday.. The unnamed baby- was transferred from Doctors Hospital to St. Joseph's Hospital after she was born Friday afternoon. The woman had told doctors she was 19 weeks pregnant, and the only examination she received before the abortion failed to reveal how advanced the pregnancy actually was. She was injected with saline solution to induce labor the accepted procedure for second trimester abortions last Monday and went into labor late Thursday, according to Randy Heller, a spokesman for Doctors Hospital. Doctors discovered the fetus was alive as Dr. Mark Gross performed the t'r t A ` . 4 * :`. tft ;k t , r"=~ ' " i i?ibs ~k_`.: take =EI .' • - • • • ••4 1 :,,04,,..• •,, ' •-•, ..• :r.,;.;..1 4 ' la ': • ' ~q.iit- • !4;5' l' : ' ''' \7\, pi ' P`xsl. "`•••• ... t • ' ,'7 - 4 , • •14. 1".5 4.: : :4,..0, 4i . , ~,,„ • _:`~. ~. IMI - 1.4. -....7 h IN "MI ' r a. gi'''' h the mayor about it. Don't talk to me." Police Sgt. Edward Mingey, an expert on gangs, said, "It seems like really a nice gesture . . . I've got to hand it to her. She's really something else. I hope she's mayor for many, many years." Construction of the Cabrini Green rowhouses began in 1942, and the high-rises were built in the 19605. Of 3,591 households now at the project, 518 do not receive public aid, Social Security or pensions, according to the Chicago Housing Authority. Median household income is $4,500, and rent, after subsidies, averages $57 a month. • Second largest is the Cobra Stones, a gang affiliated with a larger gang, the El Rukins, which reportedly commands the South Side drug trade. Police say an estimated 2,000 gang "sympathizers" store weapons and allow gang members to shoot from their windows. And Tactical Officer Phil Watzke said hundreds of residents pay gangs $1 to $5O a week in protection money "just to sur vive." abortion, hospital spokesmen said. The baby was born at 12:45 p.m. Friday, and the woman was discharged after her child was transferred, Heller said. "The moment we discovered there was going to be a live birth, we took every precaution we could to ensure the safety of the baby," said Dr. Robert Wechsler, a partner of Gross. Violations reported in genetic research LOS ANGELES (AP) A National Institutes of Health panel has concluded that a "serious" violation of federal guidelines on genetic research was carried out by a former biology professor at the University of California- San Diego, the Los Angeles Times reported yesterday. According to the Times, the special panel reported after a five-month in vestigation that the work of microbiologist lan Kennedy had Atlanta patrol protests arrest of its supporters By RICHARD T. PIENCIAK Associated Press Writer ATLANTA (AP) Fifty protesters occupied the lobby of the city jail for 90 minutes yesterday after a fourth armed man was arrested in connection with a confrontation between police and vigilantes guarding a housing project against Atlanta's child killers. Earlier yesterday only 50 people had showed up for a rally at the Techwood housing project in support of the "self defense" patrols, started after the bodies of 20 black children were found in the Atlanta area in the last 20 months. The protesters at the jail demanded the release of Edward Cooper, 38. Police arrested Cooper in connection with a confrontation at the project Saturday in which a police car was taken "hostage" for one hour by protestors. After about 90 minutes, however, police said the protesters split into two groups and left the jail, with one group heading back to the housing project and the other setting out to raise bail money for Cooper. Cooper, also known as Modibo Kadalie, was charged with carrying a concealed weapon, possession of a pistol without a license, reckless conduct, impeding traffic and disorderly conduct, according to a police spokesman at the jail. Cooper, who was being held in lieu of $2,900 bail, is due in court today along with the other three arrested at the housing project during the weekend, police said. After the arrest of Cooper, police "several deviations from accepted laboratory practice," and involved cloning of a rare African virus last year in violation of a ban on such work in the recombinant DNA field. Acting on the panel's findings, the NIH moved to virtually eliminate chances of Kennedy receiving NIH grants for the next two years. It is the most severe punishment ever levied against a scientist doing genetic engineering research, the Times said. Kennedy, who resigned from . the faculty Sept. 12, was reported by a university spokesman last week to be "exploring opportunities in the private sector." Kennedy said that what happened was an accident, when he actually was cloning a legal sindbis virus. But even if he was working with a sindbis virus, he would have needed approval from a university panel, said Dr. Bernard Talbot, executive secretary of the NIH Recombinant DNA Committee, which issued the report. i iu! : k J L.` •.ill :J i,~:i , i Meanwhile, black ministers from across the state participated in a 50-car procession through the city. The procession, which included 15 hearses, was followed by a memorial service for the slain children at the Salem Baptist Church, with 1,000 people attending. Israel Green, head of the Techwood Homes tenants association and organizer of the patrols, barred reporters from the meeting, which took place indoors. Afterward, none of the 50 people leaving the meeting answered reporters questions. The group milled around, then some 25 people began marching in the street, demanding to know where police were keeping Cooper. Although Green had said earlier that another gun would be carried yesterday during patrols, "by a woman this time,'.' no one was seen displaying a weapon. Similiar patrols are to begin this week at Capitol Homes project, and police disclosed that a youngster reported missing from that project had returned home. Missing children are of prime concern in Atlanta, where a special police task force is investigating the unsolved slayings of 20 black children and the disappearances of two black children since July 1979. NBC offers . apology for Piscataway slur PISCATAWAY, N.J. (AP) The 4 , mayoy of Piscataway says NBC has promised that his town will never again be mentioned on "Saturday Night Live" in skits depicting it as a • chemical disaster area. Mayor Bob Smith said he had spoken to Alan Baker, a network vice president, and was told he would receive a letter this week containing an "abject apology" as well , as a promise the township would never again be a target on the late-night comedy show. Smith demanded an apology after 11 ' seeing the March 7 show, which featured a sketch starring Joe Piscopo. Smith said the sketch made Piscataway "seem like a chemical disaster area while serving to blacken New Jersey's image as well." generally kept their distance during the afternoon meeting at the 5,500-resident Techwood project. The session had been designed to drum up support for the baseball bat and gun patrols that city officials have characteriZed as a vigilante group. i i, ••• ''..:-. - :....,...:..: 7 1 .P 1 .]••::' • ' ..':',!, P!`... E. E. • Polish politburo By THOMAS W. NETTER Associated Press Writer WARSAW, Poland (AP) The Polish 4 , Communist Party ; Politburo met yesterday and warned that Poland faces "a very serious threat" because of social' tensions that have emerged in the past few days,,Warsaw Radio reported. The statement came as independent unionists in Warsaw prepared to lay ' try's life have been disrupted." It did not is down their tools for a new warning strike elaborate on the warning of the "very and government and labor leaders serious threat." adjourned talks on police beatings of Cardinal Stefan Wyszynski, Roman union ,activists. The Solidarity labor Catholic primate of Poland, issued a call federation called an emergency meeting for "calm, self-control and respon of its leaders. • sibility.," In . Bydgoszcz, where police on Warsaw Pact military exercises, Thursday beat unionists who refused to meanwhile, continued in Poland and leave a meeting with government of- neighboring Soviet bloc countries. ficials, local Solidarity leaders Solidarity leader Lech Walesa and presented,a sweeping list of demands to Deputy Primier Mieczyslaw Rakowski a government commission sent to in- discussed the Bydgoszcz beatings in vestigate the incident that put three talks • here and Polish television said the unionistiin the hospital. talks would resume Wednesday. Warsaw Radici reported the ap- Walesa said Solidarity's national pointment of a new governor of leadership, which declared a nationwide Bydgoszcz province. The report said strike alert Friday to protest the Bogdan Krolewski was named after, violende, would hold an emergency consultation with the province's session here today. Political People's Council. 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Why not pick up a few local college credits at the same time? You can do both by signing up for the "Summer Sessions" program of the Marine Science Consortium at Wallops Island, Virginia. The Consortium-a cooperative effort of lUP and 14 other eastern colleges and universities-provides 'both graduate and undergraduate credit in all phases of marine and environmental sciences. A sampling of courses include: Introduction to Oceanography, Art Workshop-Painting the Coastal Area, Marine Micro palentology, Marine Wildlife Photography, Marine Ichthyology, Wetland Ecol ogy, Marine Microbiology, and CoaStal Vegetation. Starting dates for the five 19-day sessions are May 18, June 8, June 29, July 20, and August 10. For an illustrated brochure, application form, or additional information, write to: 11 IN IN MN NI NI lIN EN NI Name Address Phone College(s)/University(s) attended giteAti. R EAD • 1 1 1 : 4W 237-0361 // q/st OF FINE W" 4:00 - 9:00 Arena 130 Heister St. next to Cinemas ENGINEERS J. R. Ligon, Jr. GULF OIL EXPLORATION & PRODUCTION COMPANY Sec. E. P.O. Drawer 2100 Houston, TX 77001 An Equal Opportunity Employer M/F Get College Credits Director, Marine Science Consortium Department of Biology, lUP Indiana, Pennsylvania 15705 if the previous governor had resigned or been removed. In its disptach on the Politburo meeting, Warsaw Radio quoted the statement as saying, "Results achieved so far thanks to the intensive efforts of party and state and all sensible and responsible patriotic forces to overcome social tensions and stabilize the coun- warns of threats the Solidarity office in Bydgoszcz, 170 million members to the possibility of a miles northwest of here, and cheered general strike, but Walesa in recent days wildly as a local unoin official read a list has counseled moderation. of 16 demands. The Bydgoszcz local's demands were The demands include dismissal of presented to a government commission Deputy Premier Stanislaw Mach, Vice led by Justice Minister Jeryz Bafia. Governor Roman Bak, local police Talks between Bafia's delegation and commander Col. Jozef Kozdra and the union representatives failed to regional prosecutor. materialize yesterday. Mach was at the Thursday night Members of an unofficial independent meeting suspended by authorities over union of farmers, meanwhile, continued union objections. their week-old sit-in at the Bydgoszcz "The talks look like they will last a headquarters of the pro-communist couple of months," Walesa said after the United Peasants' Party. first round of discussions in Warsaw. Officials in the intensive care unit of "We're hoping for a settlement, but it the Bydgoszcz hospital said two of the depends on the other side," he told a injured unionists, Jan Rulewski and crowd of 3,000 gathered outside the Mariusz Labentowicz, were in good Council of Ministers building. condition but would remain in the Solidarity's Warsaw chapter, the hospital for a week. Both suffered head nation's largest, scheduled a two-hour injuries. warning strike for today to press for punishment of those responsible for the Rulewski, 37, is the Bydgoszcz injuries in Bydgoszcz. Solidarity leader and a member of its The clash in the industrial city of national presidium. 350,000 was the first major violence A third injured man, tVlichal Bar between the police and Solidarity since toszcze, 68, was in a Warsaw the unioh was formed during last neurological clinic after regaining summer's labor unrest. conciousness Saturday. PAP said he was The union has alerted its estimated 10 having heart trouble. LIFT YOUR SPIRITS WITH THE PENN STATE GLEE CLUB TENORS TRY OUT NOW COME TO 230 MUSIC BLDG. OR CALL 865-0431 UNIVERSITY CALENDAR SPECIAL EVENTS , Monday-Wednesday, March 23-25 Monday, March 23 Late registration deadline. Add deadline. Dept. of Theatre & Film, creative drama classes for children. 865-7586 to enroll for April 6-May 20 program. Commons videotape, "Austin City Limits," noon, Kern Lobby. Geography Dept. Coffee Hour, 3:45 p.m., Room 319 Walker. Kenneth Corey, Univ. of Maryland, on "Neighborhood Grantsmanship: An Approach for Grass- Roots Self-Reliance in the 1980'5." France-Cinema, To Forget Venice, 7 and 9 p.m., Room 112 Kern. Hotel and Rest. Society, 7 p.m., Room 117 Henderson. Inter Varsity Christian Fellowship, 7 p.m., Eisenhower Chapel. Eco-Action lecture, 7:15 p.m., 'HUB Main Lounge. Dr. Chauncey Kepford on "The Economics of Nuclear Power." History of Photography lecture, 8 p.m., Room 101 Kern. Gillian Greenhill, grad. student, art history, on "Photography and the Quest for the Third Dimension." Barbara Hayman, horn recital, 8:30 p.m., Music Bldg. Recital Hall. Tuesday, March 24 AIIE Coffeehouse, 10-10:30 a.m., Room 213 Hammond. Dr. Leonard Lam berson, Wayne State, guest. Comp. Lit. Luncheon, 12:15 p.m., Room 204 HUB. Robert Fitzgerald, Harvard Univ., on "Translating Homer." CDPC Seminars . : "Interview Skills," 4th period; "Resume Prep," sth period; "Job Search for Non-Tech Grad," 6th period, Room 205 Boucke. Comp. Lit. Film Series, Enjo, 7 and 9 p.m., Room 112 Kern. Eco-Action lecture, 7:15 p.m., HUB Main Lounge. Dr. Rustum Roy on "The Relationship Between Nuclear Power and Proliferation." Archaeological Institute of America lecture, 8 p.m., Room 102 Forum. Eugene Borza, history, on " 'The Search for Alexander' Exhibition: Some Background and a Preview." Artists Series film, The Bride of Frankenstein (1935), 8 p.m., Schwab. German Dept. lecture, 8 p.m., Room 167 Willard. Helmut Mussener, Univ. of Stockholm, on "German Studies in Sweden." URTC, The Cherry Orchard, 8 p.m., The Pavilion Theatre. GSA Council, 6:30 p.m., Room 101 Kern. Star Trek Fans, 6:30 p.m., Room 307 Boucke. Alpha Phi Omega, 7 p.m., Room 267 Willard. Circle K Club, 7 p.m., Room 314 Boucke. Science Fiction Society, 7 p.m., Room 311 Boucke. Women's Awareness Week, fashion show tryouts, 7 p.m., Room 316 Boucke. Education Student Council, 7:30 p.m., Room 318 HUB. PSORML, 7:30 p.m., Room 75 Willard. Civil liberties weakened under Carter, group says By MIKE SHANAHAN Only the Congress did a good job in Associated Press Writer upholding restraints on security WASHINGTON (AP) Under agencies, a new report by the center former President Jimmy Carter, said. there was a slide away from concern The study did not examine the first over protection of civil liberties months of the Reagan ad spawned by' Watergate and the ministration, which has already Vietnam War, a liberal research stirred controversy with a proposed organization said yesterday. executive order to loosen CIA The Center for National Security restraints on surveillance of in- Studies said that on a number of dividual Americans. issues including secrecy, the sur- In its examination of Carter's veillance of citizens, the military , record, the study was sharply critical draft and protecting the rights of of orders to start deportation aliens, the Carter administration was proceedings against 6,500 Iranian more concerned with national students following seizure of the security than individual freedoms. American Embassy in Tehran. A The center, headed by onetime State Department official said White House aide Morton Halperin, Sunday that some Iranian students also said the Supreme Court struck a had been deported as a result of the major blow at traditional libertarian order, but he was not sure of the exact issues by holding former CIA official number. Frank Snepp to a requirement that he ln addition, attempts to block should have submitted the demonstrations by Iranian students manuscript for his book "Decent were clear violations of First Interval" to the agency for Amendent rights by Carter, the prepublication approval. report said. \J o \ .>‘• s . ~,,AS, ...4% W . : - * No. - .0. - ,tt. o . • , 6 0 c 0,,,, $ v ~ ‘v Ne yo s,O s e% - $ •,N , v . ‘i.e to ..rr a 6 es . s% s - • , ;Ns , c 2, vet ~,1 e cto ~,,,, o ‘. 0 5 0 C.. 4 .00e , `" (0 , iO. - "`+` ," • AiVer zeo . ‘ .4 ' 6. oo ``cacti coeu. ` 0 e"A co e •a , \ - % e • N V- cc s ' o c ''' a , 'es 0c.0.e 6 c c fk .a.p \e, k so -tz. s s ? •os i), e ' Ntl e c s .sa .„ e ,o'? s iNC e ' 0 , .7 4 Nr4 , 0 . ~,e• co` x eS 0‘ te 6 tsoe , V- V e ' ~cec f‘c` y'va' oe , - est- ed a ~\-0, .30 ,a - •qe - c taP s i e VA' • o ds ‘ l,l. 2 ` ‘‘ O e \ ,i,..v.iij ''' ° V 06\1 6 °e cts‘poi` ,-,* etx d 'a ,-, A .NO" 'lO , r , ‘ v 3 v A ea t ,nCe t.‘l ',1% 1." 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ISM 1111111 MU MEI NMI The Daily Collegian Monday, March 23, 1981-5 Any 2-item or more pizza. I One coupon per pizza. I Expires: 3/ 2 /81 :i ~,. I Fast, Free Delivery !•4 I 421 E. Beaver f lg 1 4 I Phone: 234-5655 ____Joo. 1 012235/4760