.•.. . . . , • . :: ill 41 • , The Daily Collegian Wednesday, April 22, 1981-5 . • • . • . , 4-The Daily Collegian Wednesday, April 22, 1981 •• • • • ei t,m . • ~ - • - STORE a • ' ' E - ~,,, Truzun treat Costs vary Raskin- The Dairy Meyer New Suzie . - , .s.-1 , , ' . , Robbins Creamery Queen Dairy Morning Wong AVERAGE • Cafe - ' 38 flews 7 Arms 2 Mom 15 flavors 15 flavors . . • • 1 .4 4 liar= PRICE' . . • E. College .. . . . Hints help .consumers lick ice cream prices ITEMCampus Calder Alley S. Atherton Beaver College : . . • By FAROUK NASSAR . "The situation is bad," said Moslem Prime Minister Shafik Plor:-... ' , 64itt ~ .'. ~ '... , . ~,,,,...y..,:,:',,,, ::. , , -,, ~. ~ . . ~ , , ( , Associated Press Writer Wazzan as he and Christian President Elias Sarkis searched for •:' Y , ' , , .--. ; 4 4 /".A 41 4.:'4, 0 :;:i: % . ' ,e :-• 1 i l iY:; ' '!' 4 • • - 4t , ': . -4 ' • . :.• . •',.. •; ' 1 , • • , BEIRUT, Lebanon (AP) - Artillery battles between Syrian ways to 'prevent renewed civil warfare in this half-Christian, •• - - Ali • , •qr! ' 4 4144:4'•11A ". -'• '''" ••'••• -••• i, ' • ~/• - ' ~k;••i, ; .,,, :, ' •-,'';' '' '••, ';•• •Y 1(' (11 '• 41 :.. , If you've ever slipped downtown for an lage banana splits don't fill a small Unfortunately, you're not allowed to I single dip forces and Christian militias shattered the 13-day-old Lebanese half-Moslem nation of three million. . •.,,„ . 4 1 „,• ‘,...• • ~, ;, - , 7 ;" 1, ,;-"'"' , ; ...7 1 •;": ','',4 .t• • ''., .1 • .. k ,',;;""A''' , ':':4)'•,, . . 1 : ir ,,, •1 4 .•''.; •:""'• .7 -,; q './ , 4 ,''' ,4 • ' oi V 0 ice cream cone only to come back hungry paper cup, you might want to alter your taste a chocolate topping to find out if it's .55 • .40 .42 .40 .80 .47 .52 P4 . 1 T1 , 3 44 ' ' ' ' .., ,`• "' ••• • .; •• • ,r. ...: v •.*: ' • . : - , '... ' '4 , , -:,: pZ. 1 4 ,1 4 ', T fl.• .. ; I 4 ... at .. :. ',.. . . i I because you couldn't decide on a flavor, dessert choice. real fudge or just chocolate syrup before cone cease-fire yesterday, temporarily closing the airport , forcing Artillery and rocket launchers blazed along the "Green ;',;14•?",; ; ; - !4;•7 •.',••l‘. : i. ',4' • . 9 tZ.• ~ i -',:. ~ ::-' • ..' ~ ~ ' 4 ll , ' F ' y ,:' 4 k_i, 4 -,y: :, ' ''f'''' . gkqi • - 71' • : ','', 7 , : : - 300,000 residents into bomb shelters in Beirut and Zahle and Line" that has bisected Beirut into Moslem and Christian .- `e'7•;;;' , ;( - - % ;:6 ' •":';'; • - - ' (i . ,•4. ( •'-' ,1•• z•- • - .•i•.• , , , t ••••-, '• 't -,), .':, , '• 4 l , . ,`. it‘..,•,Z ir; •W ~ -:= 1 , 1 or lithe price of eating ice cream out has Several of the stores I surveyed regu- you order some. But you can ask what ' raising new fears of Israeli intervention. sectors since the 1975-76 Christian-Moslem civil war was ~•,7,4,,,,i5v4„, . ; ~',;,;, 1• , :. •,,;•:4•,, •• i• - ;•t;;;",!,,,4, •;', . ; 'l' 'I - 1„4, ' -.• 1' ••;• .l i f ; ~1. i. , • .f t re• - ,' , ;:liN ';'•. 7,, 7P94•1'' '',••• ." ~ ••'lli decidedly cooled your appetite, don't larly offer 15 or more flavors of ice kind of chopped nuts a store uses, or , Newspapers put the death toll at 21 and said more than 80 :^ . 15.":',.. , :-: i " -, ,, ,- Or .14-" ''',ll ~.A ' . "",.^; , ;'. l ' '. .'''. . , .`: ' . '''n-.!i . .' ,? . .e. A :':, ,1 .:::.' '.' ~, , ;', 4 . -:,.' . - , f, - !;':,, ,: -!';''..': i-1 . 1 ,,,, worry - I've. some handy hints that'll cream, thus complicating your dessert whether they top sundaes with real. •• - „•••• • .72 . .50 (.79) smothered by Syrian forces - some 22,000 of which remain in 'f.: '; ''''' ;V, ii64:' N . :r ' t .., .N, ''''''''' ', v • l 4'' : ', .T,4fr`i' - • ',t. ''''' ..,•\ ;:: .. 1 r ' , lC -. -C - --,%-; ''''''' ''' '' :. l ' Y ' l ` - whipped cream or use some kind of non people were wounded. Reporters said 100,000 people fled to Lebanon to police the armistice. , ~ , 1 , ... , ~,.., : .,, 4. ,..,,,,k,. ~,,,,,,„ . , ~..,,, , ~ . ~,, , , %3 i ;!...,, . ; •••:,,, . - 1 .. ii ~ r ~,,,•,, 4 f : , ~ ,, ,y-* . . ~ 4,„. ki ~,,,i help you get your just desserts. ' ~,f. ~'‘' ','" ,': •.. '. , • ,`.. '..'...•';'. ~" ' ' ,4 " •'. ;'A.' ' , h . '.:',,, ~ • , k, . : ,,,"V ;i z i ,- ;. • •' , - .! • , double s i !,.. .::5 ' . bomb shelters in Beirut, and that the renewed fighting sent the • • 1 1.,;,- ,•:••4;:-;.„ •-..-" 3 .1 ' •' ' '!.. 0 ' . . C. ' '' . ' % ' *'. '4 4. ~ii; "' ' '.. 4 1 ... , ' P ' .• le! .. . '. ' . ' '1 Firat, as this week's survey shows, tresses a confirmed ice cream maniac dairy whipped topping. .99 (79) .84 79 In the south, long-range duels flared between Palestinian 200,000 residents of Zahle, the war-ravaged Christian city 30 '.: • • •:t , •• f f.g-tv.0•;;; '-'• ;.-4 •;''l r . k ., '.- , - , ...,--,.- . ‘.. -.. . ~...sg,:-. lii3ri• .;.1,..i.. , - - ...N. , - :;,, ~, I frozen dessert prices vary quite a bit more than choosing a flavorless flavor, If, like me, you ever purchase ice• dip cone :::::!, • guerrillas and Israeli-backed militias of the Christian enclave miles to the east, fleeing to wine cellars, basements and other ' ,;,,, ~ . .4,., : •••t i W, - ; ? Ji4 i vi , , ;?.,,, 4, , , '.,...; ; , ; ., ' ..,. ~••••••,„ „,:•,,,,•••. . • . -,.':'," 1 - •'• - ...,•; . ,..;:,„.5.,, •„4,4, 1 „' :14 . ,.,., - 4,1r„ 1 / 4 .,, , ,.:p ~• ::;-: • -.•,, ..- ; . -,41 V * from . place to place. So, if for some I've a few tips' on how to select your cream and syrup toppings at a dairy !:•i:: . along the border with Israel. Provincial authorities reported • shelters. ..-'4.... .; •.,..i•,. •:i ••;,':::'• : , 7 t-- • - f' . •r•!• 1 ;4•,;:;,4•;,f,': • . - . ' • J ott•V;;, , •,;,..ff-I• • . ~, -4,4 ,!,..-,•4 0 ..,,,, r . •,:-,',:,, ~ • - ~,.. • , ~ . ii , ; strange reason you decide to let price dessert scientifically. store or ice cream shop hoping to make a ' five villagers killed and 15 wounded. . ••• .j..J,F4T- j ' .. -.4... ~,--•• , ..,: '.: ; , t .., ', • . ~'• ~ - -4 • , .. ', ' .., -,' . 4 '' ' • - ... •• .. . ~ . • 1:••• ,i it • alone influence your choice of a delecta- less expensive sundae at home, be aware • With mortar shells exploding around them, three Lebanese •• jetliners took off from Syrian-controlled Beirut airport after Southern Christian gunners shelled the port city of Sidon on fiat ble dessert, you can comparison-shop for , . . that prepackaged •toppings usually cost small nightfall. the Mediterranean coast, causing heavy damage to the harbor, ''f ' - •••• '- ' ' ••• • g e '' ;:.•: ':• • :'.' i ' lii, , „ . -,4 . ' •-•., , ,: ::. . ' .. -7 • ... ; . -..- . !EA • ice cream and save lots of money. • .4 te... , ,, . ''-fr; more at such places than they do at (.79) (.79) . ..74 . .85 (.79) (.79) .79 Officials of the airport, located on the city's southern the city governor's office said. There were no reports of . ' But before you dash out to get a cone at 7.,..,. .; 1 4,. :.- , grocery stores. sundae outskirts, said three Boeing 727 s of Middle East Airlines, casualties. .* • ' - ; •-• •.• ;,‘„ •• -•,,• 4 ,' Z, . ""': .=:.,, .• . ::.- "•Y '.. , .„,14,,,..-:•"4/;,,. 1 ' v., ~i • iit the cheapest place in town, let me warn • ;•,"...-,, • • ~ . For example, a 16-ounce can of . .•' ; . .• - • "... ;. • ' • •.\ • .. .1. , ••• ' • -,,,;, '" • . •"- ' . • '- ' , l ' ' .L . :'''..l:4,4`,+.or;VOr" t'•• .. . Lebanon's national carrier, departed in rapid succession, each In Tel Aviv, a military spokesman said one Israeli was ,• , •• - • ,•• ' ••, *,. •. . .' . • -,• .; . • 4,. -.;. •,, : •,• : ,,,f 4 -gro, ~ . , ,01 • .7* you that the quality and ingredient's of ;, - . Denise Hershey 's chocolate syrup costs 75 cents carrying about 100 passengers. seriously wounded by Palestinian guerrilla rockets fired a c ross . - • ,•:-. • ; ,••••• • , ;•.•• •• ;• • . 0 • , .. •, .; . • ~ . ~. . ,{ "ice cream" vary just as much as its • , ...inf - ( - ci Shane at Weis Market, East Beaver Avenue. • The planes were bound for: Jidda, Saudi Arabia; Amman, the Lebanese frontier into the northern Galilee town of Kiryat • '4. -4,..,-4 • rites • . ...; • -,1,. • But at Meyer Dairy, 2390 S. Atherton SL, large Jordan; and the Ivory Coast capital, Abidjan. Shmona. Israeli artillery.returned fire across the bOider, the - : ' ‘,. • , „ 7 .• • . •." ' • ....';',.• •, .. .... ./ ~,g , . ••,... . ;I : .. .! -• •• „: ~... - ... ~ -,.-., ~ . ~ - , Generally-speaking, you can expect to , <7l' ' the same item costs 89 cents -or 14 , ~ • pay more for ice cream that's made • - "' , • • 1.39 (1.11) .98 . 95 (1 11) (1 11) 1.11 cents more per can. sundae The last plane took off with lights out, officials said, to foil spokesman said. • ••• ~ .. , 1 ,:.,.;‘,P•,f.... , ...: . - 4 , ,nt,, .."... .. 20.• '"" ... ..... i 'f. ''-. •. ,' ''' `..' ' ' '.:" ': .- • ' ' ' ' ' ''''' -.(/..;„,...i., had , . , .: -, . , ~, ,„, . : ... ~:,,, ~ ... - ; ::: . .1 . ,.[-.. , ,t,,,- - - r . • 1., , 1": - ... , .. , •,,:,;:‘,!..,.:. ..,., „.,,,,,..,. ~.../ `. • 1- , .; ::',... , ,tO:,. l'! ! Illi using only natural ingredients or lots of ,• ' Tok "‘ •-• gunners whose shells were getting closer to the departure Israel Radio said later the Jewish state's leaders ,• ~ ~,, 4, . , z ,,,,,,,,,,;;,,, ~ , , : ; -,, .. v , 4 „ . , .., ~ ~.,, ~,,, ..„ .. . t .! ! , , ..„ 4 , - . _ .4,,,,.„.„, ~ , .• - . . , .. ~ ~,, ~, 4 . , So unless your favorite ice cream store , • • runway. . decided "to act decisively" against the guerrillas. The radio • ..'.. '' : ..." •- • ‘4•4'•• • ••• •;,,•'`, ••:;;- '•‘-'•if 7 - . ,'. - s; , ••'•44i4,...' ''' ,• ' i,i i k ta .. • • el", ; " , '! °;4 ''' .•••• '.,• ' . ''. •"' .• - • ••• - • ;', ; 'M A • real fruit than you d pay for the same - and . • • The facility was then reclosed for the ;night. Officials said said Prime Minister Menachem Begin and his top ministers - - ~.... ;..,i , ai. ;;•• "t4Pt., , ,-,,,, 1.... :.• 0.;-; • - ,r , ~• ). , .., c ,,, ; •••*, .• 4 =l* i, ••. ,: • , 'll, '',,, • • , r) oit flavor ice cream manufactured using First, if you can't decide on one partic - you're terribly fond of it - plan to 4 n i m• . -,,,,) , ‘hX.; '_ •, q • '"..,',!: :•%:`,,: : ~.;', ' ' •;', A ,'„, •• A, .. A ..., ' , . ':' -11,4', - .;:..• , , - :,1 , f•.; ••••• 4 :. •t"," .' ..•• " ..: i ..•.. •:.'''' • they planned to return to normal operations today, unless the resolved "to strike at the terrorists wherever they can be ..; ; , •,-, .„ 4 „., . ~; ,A. 7., " . ti1, ;4 '7' , .. ..,,',., ",', „- 7 ' 4 :. ~ 'N.', ,' ; ,ye , ..* , .: ,4 t 7 :}g, ,".. .7; 'A ' •' ' ....s .77. " , -',.:',. •, 7 7 1 ,‘47, • '','. ; '7 ;I`'. . artificial flavors and ingredients. ular flavor of ice cream, at least one purchase your toppings in advance the • 7 ., • ..-,,,....:, i ..* -2 , .5- , 4--,,f;:itipi„., l ii-. ;?, -.- ' -, 04...i..*... -.: , • -4 ' 4.:' •: - I :' ‘ '''': I '.. '' . t . : - .. ' . A• l • '' ~ .: '',...' V - 4 , ' ' I •'''; ',':..: ''•' . '' ,'. ',. ;'‘,, . . -•• ' - For example, the Haagen-Dazs. ice store in town will allow you to sample next time you go grocery shopping. 1 / 2 gallon 3.63 2.20 (2.67) .2.19 (2.67) (2.67) 2.67 shelling continued. reached." . . . ' ,'• •-'' ' 0 ,.••:"•,",...12r.;• 4 ••••••;•,v . ./ 7 .*:;•:%:,;•-•4. 7 .o ,;. •, . ...•.%)....'"•• • 7 ' •':;; ~ -. ...4•" •; .L... 4 '; ' * . r .: . - ''. 4::e. ~.:i! , :it- -...-••• ~. 1 / 4 " ....:: '... .r. •-...,..' ::..tz ': ..i , 1.'t...• ~ ,! I:4 ; '', '.'" • . UPI wlrephpto .1., cream cone you buy at New Morning whatever flavor your little tongue desir- Finally, if you really don't like any one "My • son's ears are bleeding," said a Beirut Christian The report did not elaborate, but appeared to presage ~, housewife reached by telephone in her basement apartment renewed Israeli attacks on Palestinian positions. Israeli air and An Israeli civilian is carried to a hospital after being wounded during a rocket attack near Kiryat Schmona, a , .1.,) Cafe will naturally cost more than the es before you place your order. Then, brand of ice cream more than another, near the Hotel Dieu hospital. "Explosions are coming from ground forces periodically raid southern Lebanon in what town in northern Galilee. Fire was exchanged across the Israel-Lebanon border, and Israeli Prime Minister . t , )) locally-produced ice cream you get in a should ydu discover after a taste test that you may be able to save even more by , every direction," she said. Israeli officials term "pre-emptive" actions. Menachem Begin vowed Israel would "strike at the terrorists wherever they can be reached." , .4,5 . cone at the Creamery. • Peach Fuzz Supreme isn't all it's purchasing your ice cream in a grocery And, you should expect to pay less for cracked up to be, you can still get your store. Fortunately for those of uawho eat . ... banana •• . • . . • • . , . . io.„. o'N *an ice milk product, like the frozen lickain somewhere else. ice cream regularly, several local dai- 2 .35 (1.58) 1 .25 1.15. (1.58) (1.58) 1.58 . WS I»t'ie . •... .- x m, dessert made by Dairy Queen,•than you If you can't have a free taste test, try ries sell their own ice cream at costs split . . . . . ••. • . . . • • • 4 would for genuine ice cream. watching what other people order - the below that charged for many national .. . . . ; ',•,m• . . . . Shuttle return delayed again Items like milkshakes and banana ice cream-hungry masses may have dis - brands. . . t , ,; ; . 1 splits differ not only in the quality and covered some new and exotic concoction But wherever you buy it, ice cream the s a( .. • - ' daily . . n . , Preparation of the craft to tide '' '..l' amount of ice cream they contain, but that you've been afraid to try. Often, just sold in prepackaged quantities costs less large , . . . also in the serving size you get for your by looking at the choice of flavors, you than the same ice cream sold by the 1.39 (1.25) 1.14 .95 1.75 1.04 1.25 . tolleigian ' ... piggyback on a 747 jet for the teturn '' " . • • 4.,0 ii; 4 hard-earned buck. . can tell which will be palatable. serving. milkshake trip to the East Coast is a training • • ; So before you pay a cool million for Although ice cream sundae toppings Using your consumer-sense in the ice experience for new crews who will be '•• ~ some fancy frozen treat designed to melt don't come in as many flavors as does ice cream stores, you can avoid getting • . working on future shuttle trips, •' ''. • - - ~ .0,, , your appetite - and your sales resis- cream, the ingredients used in these licked by inflation. And, with the money • . Reinertson explained Monday. Total for 7 items . • . . r,i tance - you'd be wise to ask in advance toppings vary enough that you can taste you save, you can invest in some junk Thorn b urgh supports b u d get cuts,,, just what you're getting -and how much the difference in quality. And each shire food like broccoli to please your mother. ( ) -Item 11.09 8.12 7.92 7.19 9A9. 8.50 1 4) of it. decorates sundaes with its own combina- - not available, 1: - 0 tion of syrup, nuts and whipped topping, reflects avg. price so your sundae dollar goes a lot farther in some stores than in others. WASHINGTON (AP) Gov Dick Thornburgh pledged unwavering support yesterday for President Reagan's federal budget cutting plan despite his reser vations over a provision that would destroy Conrail. Thornburgh, admitting uncertainty over how much the cuts would cost Pennsylvania, said he would back the president's plan because it promises economic improvement and less federal' interference in state affairs. ! "You're talking about a federal dollar that now comes with all the encumbrances of the federal bu reaucracy, its own forms and regulation," Thornburgh told reporters after he and six other governors met privately with Reagan. • "It doesn't compare well with the president's pro posed block grants that allow states to spend money the • way they see fit," the Republican governor added. Reagan, who is launching a .nationwide offensive to sell his economic package, summoned the governors to reinforce their support and create a show of unity. They visited Reagan at the White House, where he is recaper ati4 from a gunshot wound aUffered in an assassination attempt three weeks ago. ' , The president appeared "in fighting trim," Thorn burgh said later. Asked if Reagan seemed worried or even panicked about the attacks on his plan in Congress, Thornburgh ! emphatically replied, "Panic? Absolutely not. . • "The president looks supremely confident in the rightness of his program and supremely confident and determined to see that it gets adopted," he said. "All of • us came away encouraged about the prospects of this program," But Thornburgh opposes a part of the Reagan plan ! that calls for immediate cutoff of federal funds for Conrail, the government-supported freight and com muter rail system in the Northeast. He also is against a proposal to break up Conrail and sell the resulting fragments to private companies. "I would raise some questions about the dismember . ment of Conrail as a way to increase jobs," Thornburgh said. "Abandonment of Conrail should be an option of last resort . . . intervening options have yet to be explored." In a letter to Transportation Secretary Drew Lewis earlier this month, Thornburgh proposed a "controlled transfer of Conrail to other railroad systems" under a transition management team. In the meantime, the governor said he favors aban- Washington Star ed WASHINGTON (AP) A' Washington Star editor who-served on the panel which awarded a Pulitzer Prize to Janet Cooke of The' Washington Post for a story later exposed as a fabrication said yesterday that she had done great injury "to blacks in newsrooms all over the country." Roger Wilkins, an associate editor of the Star, declared in a column that "The essence of journalism is to tell the clea Byrne moves back home CHICAGO (AP) Claiming "crime is almost zilch" at the Cabrini- Green housing project, Mayor Jane M. Byrne said yesterday that she will no longer live there full-time, but will keep her apartment for future visits. "My stay has not ended," the mayor told a City Hall news conference. "(But) I'm not going to announce to the gangs when I'm there and when I'm not " The mayor said she spent Sunday and Monday nights at her luxury high-rise apartment on the city's Near North Side, which is about a mile from Cabrini-Green. Byrne and her husband moved into Cabrini-Green on March 31 in a move she said was aimed at ending the wave of street gang violence which had killed 11 people and wounded more than three dozen this year at the project where 14,000 people live. Police said much of the violence stemmed from a gang war over narcotics. She said yesterday that many of the problems at the project have been corrected since she movedin, although she added that "it's too soon to tell" whether her mission was completely successful. "Crime is almost zilch," she said, and other improvements such as better garbage collection and establishment of a food cooperative are under way The apartment next to the one where Byrne and her husband political adviser, Jay McMullen, lived was Occupied by the mayor's police bodyguards. • As the mayor had expected, police patrols of the area dramatically increased after she moved in, prompting some Cabrini residents to complain the project had been turned into a 'police state," with frequent searches of residents and apartments by officers looking for weapons. When she announced that she would move into Cabrini-,Green in March, Byrne also said she intended to establish similar apartments in other Chicago Housing Authority projects in the future. President Reagan greets Gov. Dick Thornburgh at the White House yesterday after Thornburgh voiced his support for Reagan's budget cuts. Thornburgh said he would give the budget his support although he did not know what effects if would have on Pennsylvania. donment of seldom-used branch lines and imposition of extra freight surcharges as a way of sustaining Conrail. The governor said his reservations about Reagan's Conrail proposal weren't aired at the meeting. When reporters challenged Thornburgh's faithful support for a program whose full financial impact is yet unknOwn, the governor said he is banking on the plan, even with its drawbacks. rest truths we can see to our readers. But we blacks are distrusted by many white editors who doubt our perceptions, our judgment and our ability to be fair and accurate. "We struggle against this every day, and Janet Cooke and the editors who failed their readers' made our burden of proof much heavier. That is a loss to journalism and to the American public because a variety of visions is required if tor cr our readers are to have their best chance to get at the truth." Cooke, a 26-year-old black reporter with The Washington Post, won the prize in feature writing for "Jimmy's World," which told of an 8-year-old heroin addict. After questions about her academic resume and other doubts were raised, Cooke admitted to her editors that Jimmy did not exist. She resigned froth the paper and the Post returned the prize. Cooke was unavailable for comment. She has declined to speak publicly about the hoax after apologizing in print last week in the Post's account of the bogus story " The greatest injury Miss Cooke has done with her fabrication. is not to. the Pulitzer prizes, however, or eveh to The Washington Post," Wilkins said. "It is to blacks in newsrooms all over the cowl try,, Wilkins, who served on the Pulitzer advisory board which overrode the rec ommendations of a selection jury and moved the story to a different category In order to give it the prize, said he had been questioned in some quarters as to whether he had romantic ties with Cooke. That, he said, "is baloney." "I got a nasty whiff of what was going on . . . when a Post reporter got me on the phone and asked me point blank whether I had a relationship with Cooke, personal or otherwise," he wrote. '.'The Los Angeles Times printed a headline that I was Cooke's story's 'friend' on the Pulitzer Board . . . "A friend.called my wife to warn her that a story was circulating that I had known about the doubts that many of the blacks in the Post's newsroom had har bored about Miss Cooke's story and that in championing the story in the board's deliberations, I had failed to disclose that information," Wilkins said. "The "I believe the only way we are going to put people back to work and revive our economy is to put an end to runaway government spending and prohibitively high taxis," Thornburgh said "That cutting process will have to go across the board, saving only our vital expenses for national defense and a safety net for those who are truly helpless and in need," he added. zes Cooke allegations amounted to a charge that I had abused my trust. "Well, the strongest word I can use for all that in a family newspaper is balo ney," he said. "I have never met Miss Cooke. The story that she and I had had an affair arose, I think, because we are both bla . ck. The allegation that I knew of the doubts in the Post newsroom is also false." Wilkins gave this account of the Pulit zer Board deliberations that led to the award of the prize to Cooke: "The Post submitted the story about Jirny, the child addict, in the local reporting category. After the board awarded the prize in that category to the Longiew Daily News (in Washington state) for its coverage of the Mount St. Helens eruption, Warren H. Phillips of The Wall Street Journal proposed mov ing the Cooke story to the features cat egory "The rest of us assented with little discussion, except for chairman Joseph Pulitzer lll's reminder that the juries which screen prize submissions get un derstandably, upset when the board switches entries from one category to another. "Later, when we got over to the fea tures category, Phillips moved that the Cooke story be awarded the prize. "One disgruntled member of the fea tures jury has been quoted as saying that this is 'just more of that politicking that has become endemic with the granting of the Pulitzer Prizes.' I do not believe that Phillips was carrying water for the Post." Phillips is chairman and chief exec utive of The Wall Street Journal. A Journal spokesman, asked about the Wilkins account, read a statement which said that Phillips "understood the delib erations of the Pulitzer Board were confidential." EDWARDS AIR FORCE BASE, Calif. (AP) The return of the space shuttle Columbia to the Kennedy Space Center in Florida has been delayed again, with departure now set for sometime Saturday morning, the National Aeronautics and Space Administration said yesterday. "It will probably take off about 7 a.m. or 8 a.m. PST," said NASA spokeswoman Laurie Culberson. She said the NASA public affairs office here had not been given a specific reason for the continued de lay in returning the shuttle to its launching site. •Earlier in the week, NASA spokes man Les Reinertson said there was "nothing specific" and nothing se rious delaying the return, which had been scheduled for yesterday. Nixon popular GREENCASTLE, Ind. (AP) The People's Republic of China . would welcome the appointment of former President Richard M. Nixon as U.S. ambassaddr to that country, a tour ing Chinese journalist and professor said yesterday. Hubert S. Liang said Nixon's initia tive as president in re-establishing relations between the two countries has made him popular in China. Liang made his remarks during a luncheon at DePauw University, the central Indiana college that he grad uated from in 1926. Liang, who teaches English and journalism at the University of Nank ing, said many Chinese believe Amer icans are unfairly judging Nixon 4 Florida escapees captured STARKE, Fla. (AP) Four escaped convicts, one wearing a pris on guard's uniform, were recaptured yesterday, but another remained at large after the group cut through the fences and bolted from Florida State Prison in a hail of bullets from tower guards. Five kitchen workers slipped into the prison yard, cut through two fences surrounding the maximum-Se curity facility and escaped into the woods about 8 p.m. Monday, said Department of Corrections spokes man Vernon Bradford. Tower guards opened fire on the and Despres did, but Dennis M. fleeing inmates, but there was no Pickle, 30, managed to get away. USSR charges 'zionists' MOSCOW (AP) The Soviet Union charged yesterday that "Zionist" or ganizations in the United States are becoming increasingly involved in a "Massive campaign to undermine the socialist foundations in Poland." The commentary, slated to appear In the Literary Gazette and excerpted by the Tass news agency, charged that Zionist leaders in America were expressing support, for Solidarity, Poland's independent trade union, and showing sympathy for anti-com munist forces. The article said a delegation of the World Jewish Congress recently ids ited the Polish Embassy in Washing- Stock market down again • NEW YORK (AP) Led by a steep drop among oil issues, the stock mar ket turned sharply lower yesterday in heavy trading, erasing most of the previous session's gains. The Dow Jones average of 30 indus trials, which had risen 10.36 points on Monday to push the blue-chip barom eter to an eight-year high, dropped 10.00 to 1,005.94. Losers outnumbered gainers by a 3- 2 margin, among New York Stock Exchange-listed issues. Volume on the Big Board totaled 60.28 million shares, up from 51.02 million on Monday. On the economic front, several ma jor banks,, including Citibank, joined the upward move to a 17.5 percent prime corporate lending rate. Many bank economists said, however, they "We have no problems with the orbiter at all," he said. "It's just us getting pressured by a timeline on it. We want to do it right." The shuttle will be hoisted by a giant lift and mated to the 747's back, 60 feet off the ground. - - The first stage of the flight to Tinker Air Force Base outside Tilsa, Okla. will take 3 1 / 2 hours. The 747 will be refueled for the flight to Ken nedy Space Center the follwing, day, another 3 1 / 2 hour trip, Reinertson said. in China solely on his role in Watergate = the ill-fated break-in at the Democratic National Headquarters in Washing ton which eventually led to Nixon's resignation from office. Americans will someday see the discredited president's positive con-, tributions . to their nation and the world, said Liang.• He also speculated that Nixon's efforts in restoring diplomatic rela tions between the United States and China may have prevented a war between the United States and Com munist nations, "awar the U.S. prob ably would have lost." The role of the United States in the world was described as "an oasis in the desert," by Liang. indication any of them were shot, Bradford said. Three escapees were captured soon after the escape. Bradford said the fourth, Raymond Despres, 31, who had been serving terms for breaking and entering and two previous escap es, was recaptured last night after an alert Duval County resident spotted him and the'fifth fugitive climbing a fence near his trailer home. Bradford said James Whitley, 26, armed himself with a shotgun and chased the inmates into some under brush. He ordered them to come out ton, and that "the uninvited guests voiced their 'concern' over events in Poland, since they perceived in them 'manifestations of anti-Semitism.' "In the same impudent way, they demanded that the Polish govern ment publicly censure 'actions by elements that are trying to discredit Solidarity, accusing it of Zionism."' The article charged that other Zion ist spokesmen in America were ex pressing support for "anti communist and anti-Soviet" actions in Poland. The commentary said Zi onist activists were calling for more U.S. government efforts to destabi lize the situation in East Europe. expect rates to drop between now and mid-year. 0, D0wn...10.00 April 21, 1981 Or, better yet, watch what other people order; if a store's chocolate milkshakes look like foamy brown water or their 11 1 The Accounting Club/Beta Alpha Psi Mr. Mal Pancoast; Founder & President of Pancoast Professional Employment Service. Topic: "Landing a Job" Wed. April 22 209 Human Development South PENN STATE NAIADS PRESENT: Yaw Yeasiej A SYNCHRONIZED SWIMMING PERFORMANCE Tickets: '1.50 [Available: April 22 Rec Hall Ticket Office 8:00 p.m. AT THE DOOR 75' with I.D. Sponsored by: College of Health, Phys. Ed., and Recreation) Refreshments All Welcome NO LUCK AT THE PLACEMENT OFFICE? - TRY US! April 23, 24, 25 8:00 p.m. AT THE NATATORIUM presents Student Preview 7:30 p.m. Denise Shane is a ninth term English writing major and staff writer for The Daily Collegian. • The • • Behrend College • Of The Pennsylvania State University For students who would like to know about an alternate Penn State Campus environment in Erie, where you can complete your Penn State baccalaureate degree In 15 majors, meet the Behrend College Admis sions Director on Thursday, April 23 from 1:30 p.m. until 4:00 p.m. in Room 305 of the HUB. Behrend College offers complete baccalaureate programs In the following majors: Accounting, Applied Science, Blosclences, Communications, Economics, English: Literature, General Arts and Sciences, History, Management Mathematical Studies, Political Science, Prelaw, Psychology Studies, Science, and Social and Behavioral Sciences. Small In Size Large In. Stature 11.11rmi.m. i e flt ili 4 6 1 46 ,. 1 C " 1 41 l : 111;4 :t? ; ? I t: 6 47: 4" t i"48 :W : 4" Cli tfe•Wio•i 1.•;•1• i•,• 4 • t•ll4 •oe 4 ri #4ll P. • • • a. CONGRATULATIONS ALPHA CHI CHAPTER OF SIGMA CHI FOR NINETY GREAT YEARS f T ii.j: a a .3 id 11,1,, LOVE, YOUR LITTLE SIGMAS & PLEDGES HE ME %W. * : 'stt ~ Ati ote . .. 4. 40 44 .„,..,,,,,,,,„ : „.. ::: ..„ 7 ,,,,. : ..,„„„,,,,,,,,,„ : 4,,. : ,,, e p.„,x..:„...,.:„... ,1 2: 11 20 111 2V 1 KAV 1i 2V 11,..ei1k.....W1 L .16.N 1 61. . MI Zill Orell MOM, ProNIPM CPS PT:11 MN 674M0M, IMI 07:1•1711117167•MICZNIMil MI innliat, MIMI Me JOIN US IN THE FOR THE MUSIC OF Dernadetkr o Cewig - PIN/ Ragra, c ceti. , woopm-1:00 on Mon. Tues. & Wed at THE DELI on heister st. E x i Eik: