4—The Daily Collegian Friday,, May 15, 1981 ~ti~f~~ tt'e • . •,,,,,„ .'dr. f2r,, , 4 , , :r•Al ; ~ i;:„', ..2. - •, , , , '" 0 : , .. 4:. , ,c,.5., '.1,, , ,-.. . . The driver of an armored Israeli personnel carrier stops on a road in occupied Golan Heights to talk with a solider on guard duty. The situation in the Mideast shows signs Of escalating despite the efforts of U.S. envoy Philip Habib. News briefs Social security, to rise in July wAsiingaroN(Ap),(-,- . -knepart ideititobt said that osslbility' melt of Health aedsarntitlieels'Atad beentied nut,- • stiokesmo sod yest*.rditylbetiNia; • ' • be ono delarinthell,2*r 6 entbeis" ?resident leagotl, in a eernPre It:increasetile packs Of Social securityectiritY redigentS,h l .4o:' 1 In6reiled TuelldaY, eaned for nieWbite Hoaseearlierinibe dnys-p pl] the benefit bilw Jilbt bad coac* rePOrteAbat:i 198:4.a bitnre that namita delay Wait benefit hike *0 :*eidd mt. beneficiaries 0 1 billion being considered ; but leafy Preislluanits6-3 billion by 1986, Secretary LarrY Sped cis said at Fostlwrdngthla y s e wow ills only a "stun" tiossibilitY. , Maui saved ,the governmen t vo . The Health and }Milian Services'• • billion and several billions more in awry spokesman ; whoulted - noCto the yeati abeiot Reagan's family to be. advised ...... -:;„„‘„.....1i0d . . .....ttetilt, xth ~, .. .....,.... i.he .day. guidelines .. ,411 . . -., -:...:tiiiiieT::An 40,4-i: otesi; Mute.. ..„„,, oilt!.:::-..2 '....,.' ed.iiotice.: ~,i ssued :as „„„; . ....„,.. ....,.,:-.: p s , ..,,„" .. ... ~ ..sfry Carter .., tau. family 4 * ----? N (~.!- .. .itousa:..,.: ... - Jimmy: ... Carter government ~...W . . a s ked . ... .'. Michael ...:!::: .divoyto i.it... ... with thP..relatives c - ' eaganlias his Ipli ' members :10 ...... '• • • . 60timf'*".- • gAilS'ei Meagan to tairodvtrfand Iy::.nlifie"l3lo. 07-7ppear:i::•?:l..:..aftd6i.,itongt. 4 iptil7. :t!).slteatieakesiO4edladehbrit!S d other d.• . - .hmai-... ~.* „„.iirs later, saidthe Knox , :..... d help an ..40i " even : „.- their ....., ' .. 11. which .. . w o uld them . e ty :in .Hotise . . . • ent ..%pielding,. ./wi, .ot lin - • . a • : White , . .. • i , - . . . • - Fred . - dance .. .. .. once. dealings, :. ~,..... .. .. .. lawyer,....-..- . i 'g4l , . ittss):;oo7 t Hess said yesterday;,...,.. •LattY:: .. :.!ornvill* p.... ident 1*.4 4 , —C,'!........., spokesman.. pass ' 0eere,,,,.......„",44r ' was P°!........• i'i-a';l and (President 16 t":oikliO Deputy ; insisting. there `: 0fri*5....:...: . C ~ ldren from; consulted ~ .4 . still : Michael.. . ••.,.. • er n', . was not .wrote ,a 14,1 speOcest t,, in ' .., 1" a: let t e r :. .. : :...Fie , Reagan ,„,ornia wutrie , father : .. ill:. •. ~ miehaef...the. %Am ...... P---t- his m tJ S+ m to mention ,nniraeti“ro_,o„„idelit's.SOL letter--, lies not 3re ......:kes se .‘...., soliciting' contracts the 1).1,-- a . rogitsPr 4.. : : :, ...busabes t Lion was in . ary. basest' response 00. ... '..: — from his scin". Interest rates NEW YORK (AP) Stock Prices rallied yesterday in an advance credited to speculation that the in termt•rate outlook might Sam ha- Prove. Financial and utility issues, which are PartieularlY sensitive .ta inter est-rate expectations ; faros well h rta ir t e Dew Janes average of so in. dus off • 3.06 on Wednesday, climbed 5.31 to 973• o 7 • kange vs • • rk StackEse shares, ; against Nnw s- million aha' totaled 42•75 • 4260 million wedoesdaY. Florida gets 2 ALTAMONTE SPRINGS, Fla. (AP) Two new sinkholes opened up yesterday, one just five miles from the huge sinkhole that has swallowed part of Winter Park. Pa lice blocked off the areas and rtxd dents of threatened homes hurriedly moved out. A crater that threatened two homes was discovered when Domin. ick Cipollone went out to water his garden and found it was gone. "There was this big hole and it hadnl been there last night said Girlfriend gives Garwood alibi JACKSONVILLE, N.C. (AP) A widow who:says she plans to marry Robert Garwood testified yesterday that the Marine Private was,Making a six=hour motor eveut trip to .tich• Mad: Va, atolotime beis iteused sexually maleatieff a little girl in his car, , ' n wae many *Am e af te r sth e prosecuti on e ' its t a s o and fse =er tOiddeen he woul dprove"the rtaUk2t I*4 the child) toudnetunbaPPe,a ,httAt by • . • d tutu -35 eyilsKa terY • Garwood, convic ted bora. eon° native, w as of Februar Y jury 41 .16 , 1,01" new sinkholes Clionone 16 "You read'about Win ter Park but . you never think it can happen here- But it can haPPen hero. IT*o*.o , 4T;oo.tiA*l*!;,4 #.4.;.,:!,!':*,.•:-A:0•41..,!;•:!.:!:.!.!•!!Y.:i:-!i.!!!!,::',1,,.:,•i,.!!.:,.:E.:iii:):,:li',,,;i!!i While Cipollone and neighbor John McClellan were moving out of theli° homes on either side of the sinkhole in this suburban Orlando town, pean ple living nearby "have been alerted as to possible evacuation," said John Spolski of the Seminole Cowl Sheriff's Department. with the enemy while he was a prisoner of war in Vietnam. He had spent 14 years in Vietnamese prison eamps, If convicted on molestation charges, he could face life in prison. The girl, who is now 8 years old, testified Wednesday that Garwood molested her after taking her by an ice cream store in his red :1956 , 986 Chev rolet. She said they drove to a dirt road and that Garwood fondled her, • forced her to fondle him and tried to rape her and make her have oral sex with him. " • The tattier, retired Marine Sgt. Michael J. Gallen Jr., said the incident nccurred> occurredbetween 6 Pan. and 7 p.m. last Aug. e i MEE y .~~ ~ r , {••.'; • ' IM4 #440 •• , ~ -ALA* Up... 5.31 ma 14, 110$1 fs * = 14 k. ;i0? ''', , r , , I'v.,ip t . `,,' ', , ' 1/i ~,,iftri , f ". ~ .- , 'yaifi ?A:AV. • , - ~',..:4144,0,1015,P,T,Ardikr.,,1 ~- ,, ,,t ' . 4, ~ , ire 4 , ) C •A..,t, ii. , ,,;„: i , ,' ;. , .. • • .. ,' N t‘r ^... ',O-1 4. ,'lO, , ', it< .'',l::'-' . • .'",;:fihri'' .. ,c , : ~ .Y, t t ' ,t- ' , . ' O' :A .. sh ' 1 4 rVti, r Turkish man charged with trying to kill Pope CLARA HEMPHILL "My life doesn't have any more sense. Nothing Wuerzburg, West Germany. i Associated Press riter matters to me, nothing," police quoted the suspect as' Agca was also charged with illegal possession of . ROME (AP) —'ltalian authorities charged a con- telling them during questioning. arms and carrying false documents. Police said he was victed Turkish assassin yesterday with trying to mur- They said that Agca, identified through fingerprints, travelling with a false passport. der Pope John Paul H and said he would be tried in •claimed he was a follower of George Habash, head of Italy, apparently refusing a request to extradite him to the Popular Front for the Liberation of Palestine, a Under the proyisions of the Lateran Treaty, the pope Turkey. Marxist faction of the Palestine Liberation Organiza. is considered a head of state. A person found guilty of Mehmet Ali Agca, 23, convicted In Turkey last year tion. "I and a comrade of the communist Palestinians, ,, attempting to kill the pope faces the same sentence as of murdering a Turkish newspaper editor, was arrested police quoted Agca as saying. one found guilty of killing the Italian president . life moments after the Wednesday afternoon shooting of But in a statement from Beirut, a spokesman for the imprisonment. Italy does not have the death penalty. Pope John Paul II in St. Peter's Square before 15,000 PFLP denied Agca had anything to do with the organ'. The Turkish Embassy requested that the suspect be people gathered for the pope's weekly general audience. zation or with the Palestinians. extradited to his native country, where he faces the • Police said the suspect at first refused to take Turkish prosecutors have accused Agca of having death penalty. But according to the European Conven-'`', anything other3than4atereo but agreed to eat yester,day - links with the extreme right-wing Action party in tion for Extradition, a treaty signed by both Italy and afternoon. Interrogators at Roine's central police'head- ,:Turkey. Italian police said there was no evidence he had" m:.:.,.. 1.. ....., 1 whey 111 Pidilb 1957, extradition can only be granted if •' "quarteii'deseifbedAg'ca as a "gtOic, a real quiet type." trained in Palestinian nillitary camps. . the nation requesting 'it gives guarantees that the' ' POli'ce reported Iriiite fount Tim Agca after he was* Rome's chief prosecutor, Achille Gallucci, formally suspect would not be sentenced to death. arrested said, "I killed the pope so the world would charged Agca with attempted murder of a head of state know about the thousands of victims of imperialism and and attempted murder of the two women wounded in the Italian officials did not make any comment on the of the Soviet Union in Palestine, in El Salvador and in attack Ann Odre, 58, of Buffalo, N.Y., and Rose Hall, extradition request, but said Agca would be tried at the the Third World."2l, wife of a Protestant minister serving U.S. forces in Rome Tribunal. Another IRA guerrilla joins the strike By JEFF BRADLEY Associated Press Writer BELFAST, Northern Ireland (AP) The outlawed Irish Republican Army kept up its pressure campaign against the British government yesterday and another jailed guerrilla joined the ranks of hunger strikers as a replacement for dead IRA gunman Francis Hughes. In London, British Prime Minister Margaret Thatcher reiterated her gov ernment's resolve never to give in to demands for political status for jailed IRA guerrillas Responding to a call for more "flexibil ity" from Sen. Edward M. Kennedy and three other American politicians, Atlanta police 'baffled' by murders By DICK PETTYS . Barrett's death was attributed to asphyxiation. Marks on the Associated Press Writer body were consistent with strangulation, authorities said. ATLANTA (AP) While another missing black youth was But unlike the most recent victims, Barrett's body was being sought yesterday, authorities admitted they were baffled clothed and was found on land instead of floating in a river. In by circumstances in the slaying of the latest young black male addition, said a police source who asked not to be identified, it whose death is being investigated by a special police task force. bore "a couple of puncture wounds" inflicted with "a sharp Michael A. Rose, 16, was reported missing Wednesday night object like a knife." by his mother, about three hours after he left a cousin's house "I don't understand it," Fulton County District Attorney headed for home, police said . . Lewis Slaton said yesterday. "I don't have any theories on it. I Such cases are routinely handled by the police department's think it was right to assign it (Barrett's case) to the task force. missing persons unit police determine whether the missing "The puzzling part about all of this tragedy is that things youth fits the profile of cases being investigated by the task don't fit. They dump them in the river; they dump them on force. land. They dump them dressed; they dump them undressed. The case of the 27th victim, 17-year-old William Barrett, It's just a puzzle." whose body was found Tuesday in suburban DeKalb County, It was the first time in the series of slayings dating from' has elements that have police puzzled. July 1979 that violence was inflicted on a victim's body after Like the murders of 15 of the 26 other young black victims, death. Burned out A coal truck lays on one side in Sylves ter, W. Va., after being completely destroyed by United Mine Workers following a rally in Boone County. Vio lence struck in West Virginia coal fields with tires being slashed, windshields smashed and windows broken at a northern West Virginia non-union mine. 3.1. 2 . t UPI wlrephoto U.S. envoy's efforts disrupted in Mideast By LARRY THORSON Associated Press Writer TEL AVIV, Israel (AP) U.S. envoy Philip C. Habib consulted yesterday with the leaders of Syria and Israel, but his diplomatic attempt to resolve the two countries' dispute in Lebanon appeared threatened by the Syrian downing of a pilotless Israeli reconnaissance plane. The plane, called a "drone" and used to photograph troops on the ground, was shot down by a volley of Soviet-made SAM-6 missiles in eastern Lebanon while Habib was in Damascus yesterday morn ing for talks with Syrian Bresident Hafez Assad. The veteran American diplomat flew to Tel Aviv and held a 90-minute meeting with Prime Minister Menachem Begin at the Defense Ministry, but no statements were issued. The Military Chief of Staff, Lt. Gen. Raphael Eytan, was quoted by Israel Radio as saying he thought the crisis could be "resolved without a single shot being fired." "It is not impossible that the Syrians do not want war," the state radio quoted Eytan as saying, "and that the problem can be resolved through diplomatic chan nels ... But Israel must. make Syria understand that it is not frightened by the measures the Syrians have adopted..." Israel demands the Syriin missiles be removed from Lebanon. Yesterday, Be gin said the downing of the aircraft had created a "grave situation" even if Is- ' • . , • • . . ■ da h t . te/na lon/wor collegia l • Thatcher said, "yielding to coercion would provoke further coercion and en courage more young people to follow the path of violence." Hughes, 25, died Tuesday in the hospi tal wing of the Maze prison near'Belfast after 59 days without food, a week after fellow IRA prisoner Bobby Sands died in the 66th da y . of a hunger strike aimed at forcing the government to grant special privileges to Irish nationalists. Both deaths were followed by nights of street fighting and riots, a continuation of the sectarian violence that has plagued this British province for 11 1 / 2 years. The Mostly Roman Catholic IRA, : °i4 raeli pilots were not involved. "It proves our thesis that those mis siles are dangerous to our national secu rity," Begin told reporters in Jerusalem. . In Damascus, informed diplomatic sources told The Associated Press that Habib could not talk Assad into with : . drawing the SAM-e missiles. The sources believed Habib's mission was in a •"crit ical phase." . Habib sped up his shuttle in apparent response to .the crescendo of devel opments. When he left Israel Wednesday, he wasn't expected back until today, but he cut short his stay in Beirut and sped to Damascus to see Assad. On Tuesday, Syrian missiles were fired at piloted Israeli warplanes, but scored no hits, the Israelis said. Then yesterday, hundreds of people in the eastern Lebanese town of Chtaura saw five of the .anti-aircraft missiles fired, with one of them scoring a hit. AP correspondent Alex Efty in Chtau ra said he saw a "bright red flash and trails of white smoke emanating from its center" high in the sky, and a small white object that might have been a parachute drifted away from the site of the spectacular fireworks. Observers in Lebanon thought an Is raeli pilot might have been shot down, but the Israeli military command in Tel Aviv, said the craft was a pilotless drone on a routine reconnaissance mission. The Syrian military command in Dam- outlawed in the Republic of Ireland as it is here, is fighting to end British rule in the predominantly Protestant six coun ties and unite them with the republic. Mourners waited outside the Hughes home in the farming village of Bellaghy, County Londonderry, to pay last respects to Hughes, once the most-wanted man in Northern Ireland. Hughes, who had been serving a life sentence following his conviction in a non-jury trial of killing a British soldier, is to be buried todayin the small church yard of St. Mary's Roman Catholic Church in Bellaghy after a Requiem Mass. ‘:1.014.10 1 1110'; 7‘.1r4,„ #4 ascus claimed the downing of a recon 7 ; naissance plane and laid the wreckage„ , was recovered. Israel asserts that Syria broke an unw ritten 'five-year-old agreement by sta- , tioning the missiles in Lebanon. Syria wheeled the missiles in two weeks ago after Israeli jets shot down two Syrian,; helicopters. Damascus says the missiles are essential to protect its troops in Lebanon. Yesterday Begin repeated Israel's de- . mand for a return to the "status quo ; ante" the situation that prevailed , before the crisis mushroomed. He Fe fused suggestions that a compromise might entail limitations on Israeli flights • in Lebanon. "This problem never was in dis cussion, it came straight out of the • stratosphere," Begin told reporters. Israeli press reports said 0 9 compro mise proposal being worked out by Habib included some kind of a limit on Israeli. • flights, while Syria would withdraw the:' missiles and the conflict in the strategic ' eastern Lebanese town of Zahle, near the ' Syrian border, would be resolved by moving in Lebanese regular troops to replace Israeli-backed Lebanese Chris:: tian forces. In Cairo, President Anwar Sadat de clared before the Egyptian Parliamept that Syria was drawing Lebanon "into a•• calamity" and called on Israel and Syria: to keep their hands off Lebanon. Senate OKs defense bill By W. DALE NELSON Associated Press Writer WASHINGTON (AP) The Sen ate approved yesterday the Reagan administration's request to spend $136.5 billion on a military buildup ranging from resurrection of a World War II battleship to space laser research. The record defense authorization bill for the fiscal year beginning Oct. 1 was passed by a vote of 92-1 and sent to the House, where the Armed Services Committee has approved a slightly smaller $135.6 billion ver sion. The lone dissenting vote in the Senate was cast by Sen. Mark 0. Hatfield, R-Ore. In a statement after the vote, Hatfield said, "The unprecedented scope of this bill the largest in crease in military spending in the nation's history threatens to make meaningless the difficult cuts we have already achieved in govern ment spending." There were few,moves to trim the Reagan request. 'A motion by Sen. Carl• Levin, D-Mich., to eliminate $2OO million of what he described as wasteful expenditures for support activities at neighboring military bases was rejected 66-29. .‘ : i .: 47+:`. , '2.'t.•* ,1 .': .;, the council candidates By KAREN KONSKI Daily Collegian Staff Writer The first step in curbing the drug abuse and alcohol abuse problem in State Col lege is education, said State College Municipal Council candidate Grove Spearly Jr. Spearly, a Democrat, said he. thinks better education that will help people realize when they do have drug or alcohol problems and when they need help will aid people more than a drug parapherna lia ordinance. "Passing a law does not solve the problem," he 'said. State ,College'i drug paraphernalia or dinance was ruled unconstitutional, but recently an ordinance banning the sale of paraphernalia was upheld in a Bucks County court. Spearly also said he thinks a drug paraphernalia ordinance could work if it were constitutional, but he thinks this kind of ordinance would be better han dled on the state level. "If it's constitutional and riot just lip service, I suspect it would be effective," Spearly said. "The type of regulation would be more the responsibility, of the state. Maybe we need to talk to our elected officials at the state level, and then if they don't do anything, then maybe we can try it again." Spearly also said the municipality should have and enforce ordinances to eliminate sub-standard housing, espe- Y — Vb - *44 — Y --) l4"4"Vg-*Af 4 I"V-4tAtAlf-AY-Ag-*A***_, AT last time before summer term M see the stars! * ASTRONOMY CLUB * OPEN HOUSE * * Friday, May 15, 1981 - * 8:30 -11:00 p.m. * * 6th floor Davey Lab - Roof * * Cloud date: Sat., May 16, same times * It. sponsored by the Astronomy Club and * * R-003 The Astronomy Department ******* **************** Spend a few houri sewing a new_ outfit for CENTRE "The place where you do your own sewing" 111 S. Allen St. Suite 2E , Saturday Hours , State College, PA 16801 • 10 AM -5 PM 238-6259 • Even if your mother always serves ,custom carved roast beef and ham, plus several other outstanding dishes for Sunday brunch 0 • • even then • • . you might still be impresqed with our Sunday Brunch. Where else can you find fluffy eggs, sizzling smoked sausage, Pancakes Diane, - crisp bacon, flaky Danish pastries, chilled fruit juices, Quiche Lorraine, hot corned beef hash, super salads, and, of course, custom-carved roast beef and ham? Where else (besides Mom's place) can a growing boy or girl go back for seconds, thirds and • fourths? Tof trees, of course. And for $6.50, even Dad would approve. Toftrees • country club and lodge one country club lane tottrees 237.4877 `'t ,, ::. UPI wlrepholo Spearly: Education is key to change SEWING Grove Spearly Jr. cially for students downtown. "We have to have ordinances to pre vent some of this rape of the community with sub-standard housing," Spearly said. "But we also have to follow it up with enforcemebt." He also said students should have input into local government, but serving as council members is not the only alterna tive offered them. "Students should have input," Spearly said. "The community is what it is be cause the students are here. I wouldn't say no to a student serving on council, but that's not the only way for them to serve." Spearly said students could also take an active role on the council's commit tees. He said there are no services he would like to see deleted from the budget, but each service should be weighed in terms of its importance to the community. Spearly also said he is concerned about services that ensure the safety of the community like lighting and road repair. He said he hopes the council's recent allocation of money for road repairs will truly improve the situation. He said because of the increased funds for the roads he probably puts a little higher priority on lighting. "I'm concerhed about the lights," Spearly said. "A more thorough investi gation is needed because it's hard to say if the money (for the services) is being spent in the most efficient manner." He also said cosmetic improvements, such as Christmas lighting, should be worked out between the council and local businessmen. Spearly said he is running for the council because he has been a life-long resident of the area and wants to repay the community through service for all the things it has done for him. He said he does not think the field is too crowded, although 16 candidates are running for three council seats. SKIRTS The latest in cotton, poplin linen, plaids and prints. REGULARLY $32 to S6B Now s l6 9° t. 5399° Fiscal plans needed, Wiser says By KAREN KONSKI Daily Collegian Staff Writer The municipality must come up with medium- to long-range plans to ensure fiscal responsibility, State College Mu nicipal. Council candidate Gary Wiser said. "My greatest concern is the loss of revenue sharing," Wiser, a Republican, said. "If we were to lose that, it would mean about a nine-mil increase (in taxes)." Wiser said trade-offs must be made when the municipality is deciding which services it can provide because it cannot provide all services. He said it should therefore look at which services are really needed before it supplies the funds. • He said he thinks the biggest problem with the municipally owned taxi system is that the municipality may have trouble funding it toward the middle of the term. The, municipality bought the Centre •-• Cab Co. in 1979 from private owners and turned its operation over to the Centre Area Transportation Authority. Because the system was operating at a loss, CATA asked to be relieved of responsibility for the system and the municipality then voted to keep the system for at least another year on a trial basis. "Owners prior to the one the munici pality bought the system from proved that it can be run at a profit," Wiser said. "If that can be done, then I think the cabs Includes Madras, Chambray, Linen and Patch Madras from John Meyer and Justin. SHORTS Poplin In 4 Colors Were 540.00 NOW $2290 128-130 S. ALLEN ST. with mixed feelings, regret, nostalgia and deep sad ness that Kalin's announces the closing of its doors EVERYTHING MUST BE SOLD TO THE BARE WA LADIES' BLAZERS REGULARLY Sl2O-$l4O NOW $59 9 0 Complete WOMEN'S STORE Clearance Over 2,000 pieces to choose from Gary Wiser should be sold." Wiser said some people favor the mu nicipality keeping the cab company be cause of the paratransit rights that were puichased with the cabs. Paratransit rights include ridership not regularly scheduled. "Paratransit is really a service for the elderly," Wiser said. "A larger percent of the population is getting into that age group. Maybe we should ask if they want paratransit and take it from there." He also said he thinks the drug par TAILORED SHIRTS In literally hundreds of patterns. 100% cotton and 100% REGULARLY $24 to N u p O t W o 2 $ 1;0 ) ------- CLOTHING STATE COLLEGE The Daily Collegian Friday, May 15, 1981-5 aphernalia ordinance should be handled on the local rather than state level. The State College drug paraphernalia ordinance was ruled unconstitutional, but an ordinace 'banning the sale of paraphernalia was upheld as constitu tional in a Bucks County court recently. "We need to decentralize big govern ment," Wiser said. "If this ordinance can be handled on the local level, it should be. That's the level that has its ear to the ground; that's the level that can respond best." Wiser also said the students have as much right as any other citizens to serve on the council and its committees. "Students are as much citizens as anyone else," Wiser said. "If they're willing to put in time in the should be giving the opportunity to serve." Wiser said the amount of time a council member must spend in meetings and work sessions is theonly problem he sees with students on the council. Wiser also said he thinks if students run for a council seat, they should be willing to stay in State College long enough to fulfill their term. Wiser said he thinks the council should work to eliminate the community's per ception that the streets of State College are unsafe. He said he thinks the police force is efficient, but people are still sometimes afraid to be out on the streets after dark. f '7 istA fl•i; i ,;:qt , •1' g i 4., 7* ,, 5 .. , 1 4' 1 V.' s l '• '. :',,,''l. , . 7-1,: 1 7,' i, , , t e? „ ' k i, 4vs fi‘f,i o , Av” ~. ' ~...i/ 1.% •", ' '4' ;'r I •.:.f, ^ '" ''' 1)1 ! ,> 5 ,,!) , ~..q, p :;;; 4 I' A rc _ I N., I s r--- j • , 7;1. 4 ,# . 4 . '": SLACKS A variety in comfort and fashion available in the sane lightweight made for spring fabrics. REG ULARLY 526 to S6s NOW 1 / 2 to 70% OFF Matter Cord .1 • ! 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