Complaints start By EffDINGER Collegian Staff Writer After receiving a number of complaints about poor conditions at Eastgate Apartments, the Organization of Town Independent Students today will mail a survey aimed at reducing rents to all Eastgate tenants. OTIS President Bruce Kelly said he hopes the survey, which will categorize all types of datnage found in the apartment complex, will decrease Eastgate rents byl 20 per cent. . After touring Eastgate this weekend with apartment manager Gene Parenzan, Kelly said the majority of the 40 apartments contained serious damages. "I found the place to be a mess," Kelly said. "There are so many repairs that if I were the manager I'd go bananas." As reasons . for a possible rent reduction, Kelly said some tenants were American couple claims witnessing 500 deaths Chile junta accused of murder MIAMI (AP) An American couple held prisoner for a week in Chile yesterday said they witnessed the execution of 400 to 500 persons since the military took control of Chile. Patricia and Adam Garrett Schesch, who returned to lapis country yesterday also accused Chile's new military leaders of "concluding a pogrom against foreigners." The Scheschs, 'graduate students at the University of Wisconsin, were released • Friday and expelled from Changes to 3-day-a-Week format Watergate WASHINGTON ' (AP ) Sen. Sam J. Ervin Jr. will bang his gavel against the mahogany table in the huge Senate Caucus Room today, resuming the Watergate hearings that have been recessed since Aug. 7. : The committee has promised the rest of the hearings will be streamlined as compared with the first 37 days. They will run only three days a week instead of five. The witness list has been culled to wean out minor testimony. And there is a self-iMposed deadline for Correction The next to last paragraph in the by-pass story in Friday's PS was inaccurate due to a typographical error. It read, "PenDOT accepted the proposal after it was endorsed by COG `June 6." It should have read, "PennDOT rejected the proposal, and accepted scheme three, after it was endorsed by COG June 6." without furniture, which accounts for a $2O to $25 rent increase. Others could not use the facilities they were promised, he said, and some had to sleep on the floor for the first two weeks. Kelly said the tenants in one apartment were forced to eat out because their kitchen contained no appliances. In another apartment the kitchen faucet would not stop running. Kelly also said air-conditioning is either non-existent or in poor working condition. Other damages included torn or paint spOtted carpets, cracked walls, toilets which do not flush properly, a hole in one ceiling, wall moulding that does not reach the floor, sagging ceilings, windows and doors that do not lock, and a storage room filled with flammable materials. The apartments Kelly found to be in good condition were efficiencies which Chile. They arrived in Miami aboard one said 7,000 Chileans and foreigners were of the first flights permitted to leave being detained at the football stadium. Santiago. The group included two Maryknoll "We personally saw the shooting of 400 priests from the United States Francis to 500 prisoners, in groups of 30 to 40, at Flynn of Miami and Joseph Daugherty the National Stadium where we :were of the Boston area. being held," Schesch said. He said the The release of the two American shootings were carried out by the priests had been expected Saturday but military and occurred in the stadium. was delayed because authorities said Ms. Schesch, 30, said they also saw : they wanted to question them further. and heard beatings adrhinistred to other The junta Saturday said 244 persons prisoners, many of them foreigners. were killed during the Sept. 11 coup The Chilean military junta Saturday which ousted the government of Marxist testimony to resume winding it up Nov. 1 Live television cameras will be on hand at least today, tomorrow and Wednesday, with each of the three commercial networks taking one day. What they'll do after this week hasn't been announced. Watergate conspirator E. Howard Hunt will be the witness today. His testimony is expected to complete phase one: the review of events leading up to the Democratic headquarters break-in, the burglary itself and the subsequent coverup. Then the committee will swing into the so-called "dirty tricks" in the 1972 presidential campaign and finally the financing of campaigns. The committee's request for the tape recordings of Watergate-related conversations in the White House still is pending in the courts. Legal moves for those tapes and others, made by special prosecutor Archibald Cox, are further along.- The U.S. Court of Appeals is deliberating whether to uphold an order by Chief U.S. the ddN Dancer and choreographer A MEMBER OF the National Ballet- Company practices a dance choreographed by Ben Stevenson, company director. The Company performed in Rec Hall Saturday night.'See story, page 4. Eastgate survey had been occupied before and whose tenants had kept them in good condition. But "new people moved into shaky places," Kelly said. ' In early August John Sousa, State College' Building Code inspector,, gave Eastgate 90. days—until Nov. 15—to make the needed repairs. After revisiting the complex Friday,. Sousa said, "I see no progress in getting these repairs done." If the repairs are not completed by the given date, Sousa said he intends to file a criminal injunction. Asked why so many repairs have been neglected, Parenzan said, "The truth is, I honest to God _don't know." Eastgate has 13 employes on,its payroll who do all they can, Parenzan said. Part of the problem is difficulties with suppliers, Parenzan said, adding that most of the furniture and appliances have not arrived. "I've been calling Dist. Judge John J. Sirica that he be allowed to preview the tapes and decide what shall go on to the Watergate grand jury. Hunt, a 21-year employe of the Central Intelligence Agency until his resignation in 1970, pleaded guilty to conspiracy, burglary and wiretapping in the Watergate break-in. He has since asked Sirica to allow him to withdraw the plea. The 55-year-old Hunt has admitted to being a crew boss of those who broke into the office, of Dr. Daniel Ellsberg's psychiatrist, although he was not one of the four men who were indicted by a Los Angeles county grand jury in the case. Hunt will testify before the Senate committee " under immunity from prosecution for anything he might say. Weather Dry through tomorrow with warm, sunny days and fair, seasonably cool nights. Daytime highs, 75. Nightime lows, 53. 12 COPIES Monday, September 24, 1973 74;N0,32 10 pages Argentinians cast votes Peron win forecast BUENOS AIRES (AP) Millions•of Argentinians yesterday cast their ballots in elections expected to return Juan D. Peron to the presidency 18 yeaTA after he was ousted in a coup. Peron said his name was not included in a list of eligible voters because he was exiled in Madrid when the list was completed six months ago. But the 77- year-old general• voted anyway at polling station in 'the residential, northern district of Buenos Aires. ~ He was cheered by many of the people lining up. Juan D. Peron was elected president of Argentina again yesterday, 18 years after he was ousted from power by a military coup. - His running mate and wife, Isabel, will PSUBranch drops case Photos by Ira Joffe PSUBranch, the union of Penn State branch campus faculty members, will not contest a Pennsylvania Labor Relations Board ruling against a separate Commonwealth Campus union. Rather, it will seek to unionize the entire University, according to PSUBranch Vice President Thomas Badger. Badger last night told the Daily Collegian PSUBranch will host an organizational meeting for all University facutty members Oct. 7 in State College. PSUBranch originally had planned to file exceptions to the PLRB ruling at a hearing scheduled for Sept. 19, Badger General Electric every day for two weeks," he said. Another reason for the slow repair pace is the high number of damages last year, Parenzan said. "The kids were just malicious with us," he noted. Eastgate, formerly known as Bluebell Apartments, originally was the property of Laurel Glen Apartments' owner Bert Rudy. Last spring the complex went bankrupt and was purchased by Rojay Management of New Jersey, which owns Southgate Apartments. Sousa said Eastgate's condition has deteriorated since the purchase. But, he added this is not entirely the management's fault, since Rojay inherited most of the problems from the old management. According to Parenzan, Eastgate's owner will be in State College today to check the situation. OTIS advises tenants with repairs still to be made to call Sousa. President Salvador Allende. They. previously confirmed five executions since the coup. Unofficial estimates of the deaths ran much higher. Weary and nervous, the Scheschs told newsmen at the Miami airport they had been in Chile 2 and a half years, conducting research for their doctoral degrees in history and sociology. The two said they were arrested Sept. 14 when Chilean troops bursts into their, home and found news clippings, books and other material considered Marxist and subversive. Schesch said he was beaten on the night he was arrested. "They told me I would be shot," Schesch said. "We knew a lot of government people and politicians and were were studying some of the government programs," Ms. Schesch said. "Later, we were told this was subversive. It was virtually impossible to live in Chile and not have contact with people now considered subversives." Sec'y of State to address UN UNITED NATIONS, N.Y. (AP) Diplomats from around the world are looking to Henry A. Kissinger to bring something new and exciting to the U. N. General Assembly's general debate, too often dulled by dreary recitals of familiar positions. Kissinger will speak to the 135-nation assembly this 1 morning immediately after Brazilian Foreign Minister Mario Gibson Barboza opens the annual round of policy statements in which 120 governments so far are listed to take part. The speech will be Kissinger's first By ANDY ISAACS Collegian Staff Writer C BINDING DEPT. PATTEE LIBRARY CARPUS University Park, PennsyNaitia Published by Students of The Pennsylvania State University become the first woman vice president in Latin Ainerican history. The Perons will take office Oct. 12. Official returns showed that the Perons were assured of a majority well 'over the 50 per cent needed to win without a run-off election. More than 14 million citizens over 18 years of age were entitled to vote. Their choices were among: —Peron and, his third wife, Isabel Martinez, presidential and vice presidential candidates of the Justicialist Liberation Front, formed by the majority Peronist movement and four smaller parties. —Ricardo Balbin, 69, candidate of the middle-of-the-road Radical Civic union, the nation's second-largest party, and Said, but withdrew two days before. "It was just an exercise in futility," he said. Penn State has no recognized faculty bargaining unit now. PSUBranch had for several years been designing a union to represent branch campus faculty only, contending they serve a function different from their colleagues at University Park. "We are primarily a teaching campus," Jacqueline Zemel, PSUBranch president and math teacher at Ogontz, said last year. "At University Park, much more emphasis is placed on research. Therefore, the value systems are different." Other persons also have suggested branch campus faculty are more favorable toward unionization and feared including large numbers of enthusiastic University Park faculty in voting would mean a defeat for collective bargaining, or at least a dilution of the union's strength. But early this month Zemel told the Collegian she saw signs - this summer that University Park is growing more Landlord-tenant bill slated for State College hearings Public hearings on the new Pennsylvania landlord-tenant bill will be held in State College next month. The hearings, scheduled to begin 9 a.m. Oct. 26 in the HUB Assembly Room, will include visits to local apartment complexes. Bruce Kelly, Organization of Town Independent Students president, said details have not been completed but Eastgate Apartments definitely will be on .the agenda. State Senator Michael A. O'Pake, D- Berks, who sponsored the bill, said the present Landlord-Tenant Act, written in 1951, "is not adequate to meet today's rental housing problems. "Our committee hopes to see firsthand at Penn .State some of the problems facing students who need decent off campus housing," O'Pake said. Some controversial provisions in the new bill state that: • —a lease or rental agreement cannot require , a tenant to waive his legal rights; Campus loop possible University and local government officials are ready to begin a series of discussions which could result in an on-campus bus system, according to Undergraduate Student Government President Mark Jinks. . The Council of Governments' Transportation Committee has discussed adding a "campus loop" to one of the Centre Area Transit bus routes provided they could obtain funds from the University to run the system. State College Borough Manager Carl Fairbanks said the campus loop probably would lose money and there are no state funds available to offset the losses. He said the route could be since becoming secretary of state and his first ever at the United Nations, though for almost five years he was deeply involved in U.S. foreign policy as President Nixon's assistant for national security affairs. Kissinger : will be in New York until Wednesday. He will confer with U.N. Secretary-General Kurt Waldheim before he addresses the General Assembly, give luncheons today and tomorrow for representatives of African and Arab countries, respectively, and attend Waldheim's dinner for the Big Five foreign ministers Wednesday night. U.S. ?oSiAuz. STATE COLLEGE PA. 16801 PERMIT MO.lO his running mate, Sen. Fernando de La Rua. —Francisco G. Manrique, a former navy officer turned journalist and later politician, and his vice presidential candidate, Rafael Martinez Raymonda. —Juan Carlos Coral, of the Socialist Workers' party, and his running mate, Francisco G. Paez, a labor leader. The election was the second this year. On March 11, Peronist candidate Hector J. Campora beat eight rivals and was sworn in May 25. But he and Vice President Vicente Solano Lima resigned July 13 to trigger new elections and pave the way for Peron's return to power. Peron was banned as a candidate in the first election by the military regime, which went out of power when Campora took office. interested in faculty unionization. She said she now feels "the campus faculty can work things out with the University Park faculty" because "the Commonwealth Campus problems, severe as they are, are now overshadowed by the problems of the University as a whole." Evidence that Harrisburg seeks more direct control over the state-related universities has nudged many University Park faculty to look into organizing, she said. "Are we going to have homogenization throughout the whole state, and should we have this," she asked. She cited examples of efforts at tighter state control were the Snyder Amendment, a legislative order that state-related universities report how many hours their faculty spend on academic work as a condition for receiving their annual appropriation, and statements from State Secretary of Education John Pittinger favoring an Open University with a possible new superstructure. —security deposits would be limited to one month's rent or $llO, whichever is greater; —both tenant and landlord must agree on a statement of the dwelling unit's condition before occupancy; —the rental agreement must name the person authorized• to manage the dwelling unit and the owner or person authorized to act for the owner; —all residential properties would have to be registered with the Secretary of the Commonwealth; —both tenant and landlord legally would be responsible for maintaining a safe, clean and habitable unit; and —eviction of a tenant for bringing complaints against a - landlord or for joining a tenant organization is illegal. Anyone interested in testifying at the hearings should contact Kelly at the OTIS office in 20 HUB by Oct. 8. Copies of the bill are available through O'Pake's office in Harrisburg. run if the University were willing to help finance it. Jinks said $4,200 in student funds are available for some sort of public transit system on campus. According to Jinks, there is some question as to who owns the legal rights to campus streets and what these rights would cost if the University wanted to purchase them. Jinks said he would like to see some arrangement where Univei•sity and local funds were combined to organize a bus system in the .area. Jinks added even ifan agreement is reached, an on-campus bus system is still a couple of months off. Though the big assembly hall is commonly half empty through much of the general debate, Kissinger can expect a full house. Foreign ministers and ambassadors are eager to hear what he has to say about the waning war in Southeast Asia, prospects for peace in the Middle East, U.S. relations with other countries and regions, and the American attitude toward the United Nations and U.N. issues like colonialism, racism and poverty. The debate is expected to run through Oct. 10.