. • . . . • • . . , , • 4---The Daily Collegian Tuesday, Sept. 20, 1983 '" . . , . * stateination/world, . . . . .. . . . . • . Search efforts for • , . .:.., . , ~ ~,,,..;..., ...•-'.......,..:::::,„.„:„..,,, -V. 4 7 : •i,i - k t . , k .V: l i . l' 1 6 ,.. .. r l;' 1•,.'3 ~. '. ~ , ,: . '','4; •!. Korean jet increase 4, /e , , x 1. , - ,-. :... i.t.: ',.., , : , ... 1! - . , 4:9;,;:....,:::.*f.n kl, i' . 'V ','Vykil :4, , , ,,, , , , . ,:, 11, -.k.,•-•‘. , . 4.-- , . -,.' , ..,., '• ' VI. .. ‘1411... V ~4..'„"- . :- 4 . t., ), ' “°'.• ' -, ; r i.;i* , ..* 4 ` ; i, • ifle - ,.;•'' .. ;q-...... 1 •• ~-' -';',,,. -; .' 4 ',,' , .' 4., , ;..' >-* ...,!•-• '.;•." ~,• . : - ';' , A , - --'; •- :1 .:-...."- J .:V. ~ ,a, , ' i .,' -:, • •., ,•,01'..S ~4,4 ' I %1.0t.441%*•• -- :•!..:.' Sum mer snow 4 • : "a Vi.i.: V . .it• i k ,'!' .iA , -... :... ', x•• , . ~..-:, ': ;' :-.;"" , :." . f ,,,, ::,, ', ".‘.....,..,:-...,- lie ';‘,, .wd: 4 ........ ~.. Y.; ' . Vfie '' By EUGENE . MOOSA believed to be from the downed plane, :'• '. ,v.V4' . l‘'.l V ll 4' • ' l ,-", , : ~' . ''•,;:'''' ;1 •:,:.',,,-: -' ' •.17 't'll:. ' :-'•:• 4. Wr . :-. .. . 3 .•" ?•*C?"" ' " ; i'l An earlybird snowstorm burled 4. ' •):i V I 'Associated Press Writer including five badly mutilated bodies ;•. r; '-,. -,':'• '''{l';'-,;*"!',''':,•-•••::•.;;:'1.:t..• • ~.. ~-''%f,.., : •:, , , ~• , ‘1;,..-f' • .'- - , •: 1, -.:•• - , ;:t , '-' -• 4/14:•--- ,, P ~.- . ..i r. ...• - , Z,, - '..? ': , v.; i a.. the greenery of summer under a and several pieces of human flesh. -:t‘, ', ', 'ltoitir, -$: ,1 :4 . -. . '741 if , „ ''•' - i? . */•`-'""%:, '''' ''' - ki,. ' • ' ' . 'll ( ''''' . ... l : lll4l ' 9P ‘ :'" - ' '''!''s I r - toot and a half of snow in the • WAKKANAI, Japan - The Soviets But neither U.S. nor Soviet authori- '•!- ,o';' .. • - '' , ..,i•:;i' .. :‘l^' • - *:' .", *ltt , -*,„ ',l› , , .: .• , . ' : ',‘ ,V.:'•C`,,,.;44 . , - I.;:ii ,;. r,"" Rockies yesterday, blocking roads yesterday increased their fleet ties have said what, if anything, their i :i : ''.; ! .. ... i. : ',.v...',, . 5.. . r ,'., '.: ! . ... ' H . ' :. : ,...'..,.. )* , '::'1. ..' 4 . ,:r ‘: ' ' ''i ' . •7 ti;;:t'F-),x.il: ..' ..,..'::... :. ' r , . ,' , . ' : ~,,, ,.ii o , r. ". .., . i ~ 1 . ..„. . ' ' s, , . . '. . .. /: : . '7 ' ~.1 : ; '. ....:::‘,14 & :i , . : i, i :, ... S .:7 '. ::. '41 ,. . ,!:,.; ;ik ;,, :. % .:;,,,, , i .. .. .; and w i c th au t s h i e ng o b ff l i a c c ia k i o e u n ts ci searching for wreckage of the South ships have . Korean airliner they shot down Sept. Meanwhile, the Soviet government of summer founds, '''i , ' .' . . ii• • ''' ' ' '; :-* d'Y'/;''#'Nf' )/* ' 1 . -•' ' '.' . . '''''' ' • X'' ' ' .• • ;*- 7 f. . 1 :. i. 77 -, ..';',"-'?•:•:.,„-:, still four days away, a fast-moving 1, and a South Korean research ship kept up its campaign to justify the . . . -..'.: T. '. r..: .:' • , a , .:# 4 411(i 4, :'.:. ' . .- • •. .. ..:, .. '%, •'1,4 ( '.:.1... ''. ';':',2r. ? ;.l.k•-:"LP storm out of Canada spread heavy with six frogmen was also preparing downing of the airliner, which it K,i';fak!", :••:*4;.. • • ~.- • ,..1 ,! ", . ' .it '0 • .•,.. • - ' . . '''' '%."\' ••.' Y '''' ' i t i?..„,7*'' , r s i• -, •'..',' , snow across much of Idaho and to join the sweep. • claimed was on an American spy r 7 '''' ''''-''. ' r ::' 4.... "''f-' 4 '' 1 . - , ' :'. .': ' ' . •'' -' • : 1 *: .- .. '.. • ' !Ir ' ' ..-, .. i.. :•.'' . 4 4 SO'; •31,?: , :"A••• ' western Montana, ' where it was Three Soviet trawlers were cross- mission. i.. • ,:...\;,•• ,•.4. 4 ,.. '4 , .. .. 7 ,..4&':..'f •.,., •, - ' .•• ,• ~..: : ~.. ' . ' 4 .. ':' . ot • t ' , .! 1 ;i: .4 \'6 7 :A l 4 4; , r• H: falling as fast as an inch an hour. il • ; :v " 4 ':.; ' Y-.: i . ',7 . ,..• * ''' ' .'; ..'''. ' '' - ...' l '''''' .- .r "'''' .. ' ' - :' ' ~ • ' ' ' ..', *".• : 3 .' er,„ ' 7 :7 , 4 .% . ; With 17 Inches on the ground in in an area about 24 miles north of the. Aviation Marshal Pyotr Kirsanov - ''•''' '7 - '7 ''''';*#/. , •"• , '.•' ,4 . 5. - f- '''''....' -- .• ' '...- ''. - •.'.--",•• :.%* •• : :'•-•/. •f •, -- - - . 1 •-•-N• 4 0,,',_40114 n. l. ' . g‘ . 4 k •e;ki ' , d e V A ' south-central Montana and 14 inch- Soviet island of Moneron with their wrote in Pravda, the Soviet Commu nets in the water. As the salvage ship nist Party newspaper, that the plane , ••• • :,.....:•••••• , E --- t ':eilr' .4 - ' ----01 - :0 ' -..•--,,• ' . - . - ' . ••• - -' ."-- - • • - . „,,,, f r. -,* , It ' A'ci! '. tii 1 , ''fAii `," ,i, • ,-.• 40-, -es in the suburbs of Helena (left), ..,•:*. yti4ii: ! ,,1.„..i.1..... ~. !•,...?,..f>tq...',.-. .• ,-:' - -' ... '• ~. .. '- • . ~- ..."•• . -'7. - :- 4, /.. 4 I,i.'ci 7 ,1 !..... -' • 11„,P: , 1 ,W;:r.,;%%i Kipektor reached the scene with a 36- was delayed 40 minutes in leaving 1.•4 .i . .. 1: ?...., ',' .. , • 4 :'..15: •.'• • ' . ,', • , ~, •..:. • , . ~ •, t , ..--, ••.... -. zi... - •-•4 , , , ... v . ';,..z.• ,• ;.-,..:•, snow brought down tree limbs and foot minisub and a diving bell about Anchorage, Alaska, when it refueled, . - •,•,-''.:,' ••,..Al, ,••-•!,-,,. • ;:-,:.. •,. ...-.., . _ .r. ~ • .. ,• ..?, .• .. s , . • - • , vr...• .), .40.;).,. , ... . ~ ~ .11 power lines. • • t:' , ;-1 ••1 . ..- -. ' . r,• i :• --,.... ••• • ..:•.,....' ..,.:.. ., : ~:.., -... ••., • ..• 0k .. l-k,, .1-'• :: •;, !. .6, " 1..' • • ~. . 1 .. , . ' .., ji.• 1 P .-.:,:,' :. .-: ~-il,. • - .. ...,,,, „.. , . ~,,.- .'._ :.,' .......;,)„.. ,:-.,..,...:.. ; *... ' ....:„. '.. -. • , • - •4.,„ ~ - . . i ..- , ....ex,v.,9l_, -01 ..,. ,• -k, =, ; fit 12-feet in diameter, the survey ship so that an orbiting U.S. spy satellite, Gidronaut retrieved another minisub the Ferret-D, would be in position to P! ':_,,. • • ,4 ,1*- - ',,A ''. '',,';; ; •!•' .. . ! ....:••:: , ;•.:,...7;•••,,,..)4; ,, v . :•.' 7 1..,,. ' , 1 , 1•:r..: Iwi 4 7.., . 1.- e**-4 / ".. • • :%.,':,, ',!, ' 451, , . • •?,: ;V* V' E. from the water. track the plane's intrusion over Sovi- •, Still another minisub was observed et nuclear installations and the Soviet -,.. ir'' iilA, .., •-,.' . • ' ... ••.A 7 .'''....l{:-. .•.. .. •'' '• ..','" •••--'-''• • , • .. • ••••• ''. ./. ••• t " , '''' , A" I• • 'li. -`•* '! .0- t •'. . , # • • - ' - • . - th• •1.• • .•• ••-- .. . --.-.• ,f • 5.7 . 3 ••, , ,T$ • •,.. tv . ..- .'V,. . - 4 operating from the rescue ship response. t'F• - • • il .. , ~. ~.;. ~,, ' ,..1,--i• •.. .'' •••-: ~ • 7..,: '''' ,.. . . ~ , . ..., ... 1? V 'N.: . . ~Y ? .* . 1.. 1 '4 l,i , . 4,...,- t e-:, Georgi Kozumin late Sunday night. At U.N. headquarters in New York, • The Japanese reported finding Soviet delegate Igor Yakovlev • • more wreckage from the Boeing 747, charged that the refusal of the gover- I'"% I • • • u i • I including a piece of the cabin wall nors of New York and New Jersey to Plant providing meat for schools said to be • filtny and a chunk of lightweight metal let Foreign Minister Andrei A. Gro- . . alloy. myko's plane land at Kennedy or . • . • . • Japanese officials said three more Newark airports violated the 1947 By WAYNE SLATER. "If the government can't get rid of bad outfits submersible vehicles - two minisubs agreement between the United States Associated Press Writer 'I wouldn't want my child to like Cattle King, and is dumb enough to turn around . . and a diving bell - were added to the and the United Nations providing thatafter convicting them and buy more meat from 19 Soviet ships and one minisub U.S: "federal, state or local authori- DENVER - The Agriculture Department said eat that meat. In fact, I don't them and feed it to our children, obviously the searching west of the Soviet island of ties" shall not impede the transit of yesterday it will investigate charges of rats, filth think anybody shduld eat it.' system isn't working," Brunner said at a news Sakhalin, but there was no indication representatives of U:N. member and "stomach-turning" conditions at a meat-pack- conference yesterday in Chicago.. "I think every they had located the principal target countries to and from U.N. headquar- ing plant that sells beef to the school lunch pro- —Joe Padilla, USDA inspector parent of a school child ought to be just as enraged' of the hunt - the airliner's two flight ters. gram. as I am." data recorders. Because of the ban, Gromyko aban- John McClung, a spokesman for the USDA, said Henry Stanko acknowledged the firm was con the department's inspector general "will involve King and' Nebraska Beef, which is not included in The recorders, carried in the tail of Boned his annual visit to the U.N. victed in Nebraska of violating federal regulations, the jumbo jet, might contain tapes of General Assembly, which opens to- himself in a full investigation of Cattle King," the current USDA inquiry. but said those problems were solved. He said Cattle which sup plies nearly one-quarter of the meat for He said the group's investigation found that King in Denver had never been cited by the USDA. cockpit conversations that would help day. The U.S. deputy chief delegate to the unravel the mystery of why the plane the United Nations, Charles M. e nation's school lunches. • Cattle King workers in Denver distracted USDA The allegations, he said, were based largely on "I'm not prepared to say there is something inspectors so that they could drag dead cattle onto daily sanitation reports by USDA inspectors crit • strayed into Soviet airspace before a Lichenstein, retorted that if the other . . wrong with that plant or that there isn't. That will the "killing floor," that diseased meat was re- ical of the Denver plant. He called the reports Soviet fighter's missiles brought it U.N. members wanted to move U.N. . have to await the investigation," McClung said. worked into hamburger, and that employees tiri- "routine" and "simply memorandums, not viola down, killing all 269 people on board. headquarters out of the United McClung said the USDA "independently had nated on the floor. tions." At least four U.S. Navy .ships with States, "the members Of the U.S. been made aware of charges prior" to an NBC In Illihois, where meat from Cattle King went to "We have 11 USDA inspectors and graders work special underwater equipment, four mission will be down at the docks television report critical of Cattle King, broadcast schools, prisons and state mental institutions, the ing there every day," Stanko said. "The meat South Korean trawlers and three Jap- waving you farewell as you sail into Sunday on the "First Camera" program. Chicago public schools acted yesterday afternoon inspectors in this area are thorough, not that we anese ships were searching an area the sunset." . The Better Government Association, which •to stop using the meat, said Food Services Director don't think they're too strict sometime." about three miles northeast of the In Paris, an Air Prance flight to worked with NBC on the six-month investigation, Cain Jones. The NBC report quoted USDA inspector Joe Soviet fleet. Moscow was canceled today for the alleged the owners "systematically violated the Stanko's cousin, Henry Stanko, administrator of Padilla as saying, "I wouldn't want my child to eat ' • The Pusan 851-C, a South Korean first time since a two-month pilots' most fundamental standards of public health and the Cattle King packing house in Denver, denied that meat. In fact, I don't think anybody should eat research ship carrying six frogmen, strike began last Tuesday to protest sanitation" at plants in Colorado and Nebraska. any health problems at company operations. it." ' was preparing to join a large fleet of the Soviets' Owning of a South Ko- J. Terrence Brunner, executive director of the Nebraska Beef Processors was convicted of a . One USDA inspector told the BGA, Brunner said, • Japanese patrol vessels and aircraft rean airliner. Chicago-based watchdog group, which is privately felony in 1981 for adulterating meat at its Gering that Cattle King was "filthy. They do everything - searching in the Sea of Okhotsk along The F r ench government did not funded, said Cattle King and Nebraska Beef plants plant, the USDA, said yesterday. Henry and Ru- misuse labels, inject meat, intimidate inspectors." the northeast coast of Hokkaido. join other West European govern- are dirty and infested with rats, the meat is dolph Stanko pleaded guilty to a misdemeanor in Brunner said the investigation was unable to The Japanese have .reported the ments in closing its airports to the unwholesome and packages are mislabeled. Ru- the case and each was sentenced to four years' prove anybody had become sick from eating Cattle recovery Of more than 700 items Soviet airline Aeroflot for.two weeks. dolph Stanko of Gering, Neb., owns both Cattle probation. King meat. . . . .. .. .. , .. . , .. . , . ... .. .... - . . . . .... _ , . . . • • . • . . , . „ . v • , .. .. . . ... , ..„... • • , ••• .. ....• . • , • • , • • • • • .. The Cape Cod Triathlon • •.• ..... .... . :..•• .......-• ... . .. ~. ... .. .. . . . . .. . • • • • , •• •.. • • • - .• • - .•,..- ..• . • , • • - ~ • .... .. . ... . . .. .. . . • 2.4.8w1m, 112 Bike, 26.2 Run . .. . . • • .•. .. - • • ~ .• . . • . . ~ •• • • - • • - . • • . • - . •.• ... .. . ..... .., PICNIC ~ . .. • , My sincere thanks to the many sponsors who - . . - . • . •.. . -•- -•• • • • MONDAY:. ..: . •.. • . helped me complete this event. . . . . . • ... •• - ... .. , ~. ..... ... . .. . . . .. ......•. . . . • - • . . • . ~ .• • . • • . Peter Bortolotti Radid Transit • • • • . . . . . . - • • .... .. " . • ' ' • ' ' . . ' . . . . . . . .. Phi Beta Lambda .... , . Bill ßuckler Private . . .. •. • Anthony De g leris Federated Home & Mort g a g e Co. , Inc. •, . Geor g e Dix Dix Pontiac Honda Co. . . , . Herb and Nancy Jordan Family ••'.•'', • • • • • • • • ••• • - •• - - . TUESDAY... .•••• Weds. Sept. 21 6:00 pm . .. .:. Don Kassab Athletes Foot • • • - •• . • Jeffrey Picnic Area Ernie Oberman The Phyrst .. . . . . Dr. Kurash Ostovar • Arthur's -••- • • ••••• • - • •• ...- - - (Across street from IM baseball field) .. . Ilk ....-. ... ..... ~ ..... :-....:.,.• . : ..... . Christ Papadopoulos . 100 West, Inc. John Shaffer Lions Pride . • , .. ~. . . ... ..„ .. .• .• ' Don Stine &John O'Connell The Rathskeller :IM.ii- 0 . . • •' • . : . . • . . Dick White Nittany Coal All Business Students Welcome . . ...,. . • .: •. ,• . • .. • Andy Zangrilli Heisler St., Inc. • . . . ~ •• . _.. . . . , . . .. . . . • . .. ... . . . , ~ • —... .. •, 1 i I — r . ; ..., .... . , . R 3 , . ~.. -. • , . ... . • ~ . .. .. . Many • . . . . . . . . .. . .. • Thanks ... .., __ . . ..., . '--iii" . l -8141 8 . 1 -7.:-. '...,:. 07 ..... Mark Dreibelbis .. . . .. . . •• . .- •:. •• :. .• • •.• .• •. .. •• . ..... . ~ .• .• • •. . • . • ..-. ••. .. •r• • . • • . . . Distinguished -,--). . • .. • . . Speaker Series - Penn State . . .. ATTENTION! • . WOMEN ARE WINNERS: • • • Marketing:: .. • . .:: :: FILM AND DISCUSSION SERIES: • Presents: • Association ... .. . . .'. . . . BUSINESS ADMINISTRATION ... . . . . . • .. . . SEPT 21 STUDENTS , . . • ~ . • . • . . • „. EUSF7. .. • . • . '•• • . RIGHT OUT OF HISTORY: THE MAKING OF JUDY CHICAGO'S "DINNER .. The USFL- Philadelphia Stars . . . . • WINTER & SPRING IN LIMA, PERU ~ .:. PARTY." Contemporary American artist Judy Chicago uses the tradl • • tional "women's techniques"of china painting and needlework to • • ...-: Bob Moore Media Relations Director will discuss : • - - create "The Dinner Party"- a monument to women of spirit and ac- Applications are Still Available . .:- ..:: . complishment in Western civilization. This film follows the progress ... . . .: .• of the exhibit as it takes Chicago and her crew of more than 400 S.. • "HOW TO KEEP A GOOD THING GOING - i ~ - Slides, Questions & Answers, . .. women and men five years to complete. For them all, it Is an alter- / • ' nately painstaking and exhilerating experience. . . . .. • Application Materials . • PROFESSIONAL SPORTS MARKETING" ••• : -. Speakers: Sylvia Apple, Centre County quilter. Melanie Lachs„. • , •• • . Art History graduate student, PSU. • . . •-• • Tuesday,Sept. 20th, 7 . 00 p.m., 305 HUB ~. . 8 P.M. :' '• Wed. Wesley Foundation Free Admission . , .. Tuesday, SEPT. 20 7:3opm 108 Forum . . . , . - ..' . s' - ' . . ''''''...... . ...' - ....--- ..... . ...., . ~.. .. . ~,.. ... ... ...... .. . .. .. ... . .„. . .... . .. . .. .... ~.. ... .... . . . . . . . .. ..... . . . . . .. . . . . , . . .. . . „ The S & H Lecture Series ATTENTION STUDENTS the (open to public) Roger L. Shinn • . College of Business Administration - Niebuhr Professor At Union Theological Seminary • Pre-Professional Internship Meeting [: New York Prof. Roger Shinn has been deeply involved in studying and writing about STS issues such as nuclear power and nuclear war, and participated, especially via the World Council of Churches, on the decision-making process he will describe in his lecture. Tuesday, September 20 Science and Ethics: 7:30p.m. Room 362 Willard Building A Case Study in International Decision Making • 12:15 pm - 101 Kern - Sept. 21, 1983 Students with 4th to 6th semester standing Dr. Shinn will also speak at 8 p.m. in Eisenhower Chapel ' ' seeking CBA internships for 1984- Spring, on "FORCED OPTIONS" Summer, Fall are eligible to attend. . Science, Technology, and Society Program , • State SAT scores below average HARRISBURG (AP) The performance of Pennsylvania stu dents on recent Scholastic Aptitude Tests shows the need for stronger curriculum standards in schools, state Education Secre tary Robert C. Wilburn said yesterday. The secretary noted that Pennsylvania's college-bound students scored seven points under the national average in math. An across-the-board strengthening of school curriculum stan dards is before the Board of Education and is expected to be acted on in November. Wilburn supports the package of new school regulations. Under current regulations, a student is only required to take one math course to graduate. "The proposed new curriculum regula tions will require three mathematics courses in place of one, and we expect that will make a significant difference in our students' performance over time," Wilburn said. Pennsylvania students scored a 461 average on the SAT math section. State students'averaged 425 on the test's verbal section, the same as the national average. Adoptive mom asks maternity leave PITTSBURGH (AP) With parents and adoption agencies rooting for her, Carole Fezar says she's hopeful she'll win what she considers her rights as a mother. Fezar was denied an unpaid maternity leave last spring because her only child, 8-month-old Kristin Marie, is adopted. "I've been taking care of my t)aby and enjoying her. I have no regrets. But I want my maternity leave," said Fezar, who has been home since May 31. Her husband, Michael, called next week's showdown with her employers and a federal mediator "unnecessary." Fezar, 39, a clerk for 18 years at the tax office in the nearby borough of Ambridge, had expected no problems when she first contacted her supervisor about a maternity leave. But the borough council denied her request by a 4-2 vote, explaining it didn't want to set a precedent and that maternity benefits were meant for "a female borough worker (who) con ceived and got pregnant." Hustler mailed to Reagan, congress WASHINGTON (AP) Publisher Larry Flynt was criticized on the House floor yesterday for giving free, unsolicited subscriptions of his Hustler magazine to President Reagan, • Vice President George Bush, the nine Supreme Court justices and all 535 members of Congress. In a letter enclosed with the first copy, sent to each legislator in a brown envelope marked "Personal," Flynt said his nudie mag azine would help members of Congress "stay well informed on all social issues and trends." He added: "I am sure that your constituents, who appreciate good pornography, will be happy to know that you have a subscrip tion to their favorite magazine." A presidential spokesman, Anson Franklin, said the White House reaction to the gift subscription was "thanks, but no thanks." Franklin said that because of the volume of mail it receives, the White House would not go to the trouble to ask Flynt to remove Reagan from his mailing list. The magazines "will probably end up in a trash can," he said. Editorial editor and family murdered FORT WAYNE, Ind. (AP) The bodies of Fort Wayne News- Sentinel editorial page editor Dan Osborne and his wife and son were found in their blood-spattered house yesterday, but his 2-year old daughter was rescued unharmed after apparently living there alone for days. The girl, ,Caroline Osborne, was led from the home today by police after the bodies were found. The dead were identified by police as Osborne, 35, his wife, Jane, and their son Ben, 11. A co-worker at the News-Sentinel was sent to his home because Osborne did not report to work as scheduled yesterday. Bush: nuclear arms talks to continue BUDAPEST, Hungary (AP) Vice President George Bush told the leaders of this Soviet-bloc country yesterday that America would continue nuclear arms talks with the Soviets "in good faith" to reduce the threat of war. Also yesterday, the United States received renewed expressions of support from British, West German and Italian leaders in the U.S.-Soviet negotiations in Geneva on medium-range missilei in Europe. Bush referred to the Geneva talks and said the United States has put forward proposals "to lower the levels of the most dangerous, destabilizing weapons now in Europe." The missile talks have entered their last scheduled phase, and if there is no progress, NATO plans to begin deploying 572 U.S.-made Pershing 2 and cruise missiles in Western Europe later this year. Moscow has indicated it would react by placing more new SS-20 missiles in Eastern Europe. Shamir . strengthens coalition JERUSALEM (AP) Foreign Minister Yitzhak Shamir ap peared almost certain to succeed Menachem Begin as Israel's next prime minister after two key coalition factions announced yester day that they unanimously supported Shamir. The action by the National Religious Party and TAMI, an ethnic faction representing Jewish immigrants from North Africa, ap peared to quash speculation that some of their members might defect from Shamir's camp and join the Labor Party in forming the next government. They were two of four parties that sent delegations to President Chaim Herzog yesterday to state their choice for the premiership. TAMI leader Sharon Abu-Hatzeira told reporters after seeing Herzog that his party of three parliamentary representatives supported Shamir but said he suggested that Herzog ask both opposition leader Shimon Peres and Shamir to form a broad unity government under Shamir's leadership. "In our evaluation Peres has no chance of forming a govern ment," Abu-Hatzeira said he told Herzog. stock report Market rises at Volume Shares interest rates fall 99,169,000 -±..-. Issues Traded NEW YORK (AP) De- 1,949 clining interest rates provided the inspiration for a broad Up gain in stock prices yesterday. 1,116 _—_-_— Auto, rail and technology stocks took leading roles in the Unchanged advance. 351 The Dow Jones average of -- 30 industrials rose 8.23 to Down 1,233.94 to go with a 10.67-point 482 advance Friday. Volume on the New York • NYSE Index Stock Exchange reached 85.63 97.09 + 0.92 million shares, against 75.53 • Dow Jones Industrials million in the previous ses- cp 1,233.94 + 8.23 sion. on EVERY Ovation in stock— Roundbacks, Basses & Electrics A O O /0 011 t 0 1111°1 IC y.* :\ li ti y a a s tio to A i Sep t protiv Prices too low to resist Bass & case reg. 705 00 now 350 0 ° Electrics reg. 59000 now 329°° A/E Ultra 429°° now 269°° MORE! Hurry in for good selection MUSIC MART 227 E. Beaver Ave. ./?c.4 „ ii L une i'''' - v>''''''‘ 4441/7cir ,<‘,6‘ef t‘V) Lin II 9 9 41, ovOc"('' 1, 0 Ik*, c 4 nch" V't.* " j a l u n c h "C •• n CIVill " 1 a 0 4 -r) "Lunch., ci,o, 0 t„(.4y .).vva'' . 1 ., .1 4 "Lunch" o- cc On "Lunch's ~..- Ch 31 •se ''( 4/ 4...va „,s.•• . 4 ,, 1111- _ (/) 4 free pepsis with any ( 1 ,0 IP b pizza ordered between 11 am and 4pm I. E N I 0 PI one coupon per pizza 0 1 .4 - o expires 9/25/83 t. ,4„ 11 IwP North: 237-1414 South: 234-5655 1 1104 N. Atherton 421 Rear E. Beaver A 4 , I Limited delivery area our drivers carry 7 i 3' 4I less than $lO 16 .1 -44%1 AirAtril?.. ' n V P Ir LLB Phone 238-3711 I r t 't I, is ‘,,1111° When the cry goes up for lunch... There's only one place that stands apart from the rest... Domino's Pizza! Domino's Pizza is #1 for fast, free, 30 minute delivery. We use only the best ingredients, hand rolled dough and 100% natural dairy cheese to make a noticeably superior pizza So when the cry goes up for lunch...give us a call! Domino's Pizza Delivers.'" b: =Q:. I a a: - Fast, Free Delivery TM North: 237-1414 1104 N. Atherton South: 234-5655 401 Rear E. Beaver Hours: 11:00.2:00 AM Sun.-Thurs 11:00.3:00 AM Fri.-Sat. NOTICE: The Phyrst "Irish Pub" Bottle Shop is Now Open 7 AM DAILY! 4 Beers On Draft— Your Favorite Liquor Drinks—Shots N'Beer Guinness & Harp Your Favorite Imported & in Bottles Domestic 6 Packs To Go The Daily Collegian Tuesday, Sept. 20, 1983-5
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers