4—The Daily Collegian Tuesday, March 25,1980 News briefs Arabs protest Jewish school JERUSALEM (UPI) Angry Arabs in Hebron rallied yesterday to protest Israel's decision to set up two Jewish schools in their city and West Bank leaders called general strikes in solidarity with the all-Arab town. Hebron Mayor Fand Kawasme declared a general strike for today and said the 70,000 residents of his staunchly Arab city will have nothing to do with Jews from the neighboring Jewish settlement of Kiryat Arba. He said the entire City Council of Hebron, second largest town on the West Bank, will resign if Israel im plements the decision allowing the first Jewish presence in the city in over 50 years. Police say killers were hired PHILADELPHIA (UPI) The hit team that executed reputed Philadelphia mob boss Angelo Bruno was contracted from a Hoboken, N.J.-based murder-for-hire gang responsible for at least 18 killings, a police investigator said yesterday. Det. Lt. Joseph J. Delaney, 44, an underworld expert with the Paramus, N.J., Police Department, verified information obtained-by UPI from a ranking organized crime informant. The informant said the same hit team is being investigated by federal and local police for 18 professional killings in the greater New York area alone. He said investigators also were checking possible links to the Nurse denies 'death's angel' -* jani Adams Pr - oxmire apologizes fOr libel WASHINGTON (UPI) Sen. William Proxmire, D-Wis., proud of 'his role as the Senate's chief penny pincher, apologized yesterday to a scientist who said he was libeled by one of Proxmire's "Golden Fleece" awards. Proxmire also had to pay the researcher, Dr. Ronald Hutchinson, $lO,OOO plus court costs of $5,132 as part of a settlement of the doctor's $8 million defamation suit against the senator and a legislative aide. "Some of my statements con cerning Dr. Hutchinson's research may be subject to an interpretation different from the one I intended and Students protest tuition raise HARRISBURG ( AP) Student leaders visited the Capitol yesterday to protest a proposed $l5O tuition hike at 14 schools and press for more aid to the state-owned institutions. Last month, Education Secretary Robert Scanlon said a hike of at least $l5O, as well as 200 layoffs, will be necessary to stay within the budget recommended by Gov. Dick Thorn burgh. Members. of the Commonwealth Association of Students urged the Senate to amend a House bill to in clude $ll million in additional aid, in exchange for freezing tuition at the Braces a 'glaring' mistake DENVER (AP) Newswoman Betsy Dill's corrective braces on her teeth cost her her job as co-anchor on the weekend news of KMGH-TV, Channel 7 in Denver, station manager Robert Hart said. Dill, who was removed from the post earlier this month, got the braces last fall and expects to have them another year. Hart did not criticize Dill's abilities as an anchorwoman. He praised her reportorial skills and said the braces had not affected her on-the-air delivery of the news. "I hope she stays as a reporter until Journal story misses the pope PHILADELPHIA (AP) When Monsignor John Foley read the ar ticle entitled "Conversations with Pope John Paul II," in the the March issue of Ladies Home Journal, he said he recognized it for what it was: "Conversations with Monsignor John Foley." When he was the English-language press liaison for the pope's October visit to Philadelphia, Foley said, he Of the Kiryat Arba settlers who shop in Hebron and visit and pray at the town's Jewish holy places, Kawasme said, "We will not sell to them, we will not speak to them, not say shalom to them, not work with them." "Empires come and go, including the British empire, and the Nazi empire," Kawasme said. "The Zionist empire will also fall." • No violence was reported at the demonstration in Hebron, which was confined largely to angry speeches denouncing the Israeli decision that defied opposition from Israel's two peace negotiating partners, Egypt and the United States. assassinations of Carmine Galante, a reputed top New York mobster who was killed in July 1979, and Anthony "Little Pussy" Russo, who was executed in his Long Branch, N.J., apartment in April 1979. Bruno, identified by federal authorities as godfather of one of nine top U.S. mob families and the last of the old-fashioned dons, was executed gangland-style last Friday night, two months shy of his 70th birthday. An underworld informant told UPI, "I have heard it now from two dif ferent sources that a west side Manhattan hit team with leadership connections in Hoboken took the order to kill Bruno." LAS VEGAS, Nev. (UPI) A nurse wept yesterday before a grand jury investigating reports of hospital mercy killings, said she was "sickened" by the probe and denied the existence of a "death's angel" who withdrew life support equipment from critically ill patients. The nurse, Jani Adams, 32, was interrogated prior to her grand jury appearance by police who threatened her with the gas chamber, her at torney charged. Adams, 32, the nurse in charge of the midnight shift in a respiratory unit at Sunrise Hospital, wept when she entered the grand jury room. "I'm sickened by this," she told reporters. Adams and her boyfriend, Bernard Deters, 39, were suspended along with five other hospital employees March 13 in the wake of a police in vestigation of the "death's angel" reports. Deters also testified before the 17-member grand jury. UPI wirep!ipto I am happy to clarify them," Prox mire said shortlty after the Senate convened At issue was a 1975 "Golden Fleece" award to Hutchinson, 43, a researcher at Kalamazoo State Hospital in Michigan. Proxmire presents the awards monthly for what he considers the most ridiculous federal expenditure. In presenting the award to Hut chinson for his experiments on why monkeys clench their jaws, Proxmire said Hutchinson "made a fortune from his monkeys" while making monkeys out the taxpayers. current $950 per semester In case the amendment does not pass, the students said they also back a Senate bill that would give the schools $l2 million, with the same tuition freeze condition. Chris Leavey, president of the lobbying group, called on minorities, women and veterans to help "maintain accessibility to higher education." He said tuition hikes will be "disastrous for middle and lower class families who are attempting to deal with the spiraling rate of in flation." the braces are removed," Hart said. "She's a very capable reporter. Perhaps she could be used again on an anchor . job." But he said the station believed the braces were annoying the show's audiences "We've had complaints; I don't know how many," Hart said. Hart said the decision to take the anchor job away from Dill, whose contract expires April 1, was made by news director Dave Henderson on March 13. Henderson was unavailable for comment. was approached by the author of the magazine article, who asked for an interview with the pope. Foley estimated that his remarks account for 15 to 20 percent of the comments attributed to the pope. When it was suggested that he be addressed as "Your Holiness," . the monsignor corrected a reporter. "Your Foleyness," is the correct form of address, Foley said, House, votes closing state HARRISBURG (AP) The House voted yesterday to stop Gov. Thorn burgh from closing state institutions or transferring their control to private groups without legislative approval. Rep. Gregg Cunningham, R-Centre, opposed the legislation, saying that if the legislation is passed, "No institution will ever be closed . . . because of the political pressure involved." Representatives voted 153-27 for the anti-shutdown amendment, which was partly a reaction to Thornburgh's plans to close nursing schools at the Ashland, Philipsburg and Hazleton state general hospitals. The measure was sent to the Senate. As part of a statewide economy move, the Thornburgh administration is considering closing or transferring control of its nine general hospitals and possibly other facilities. "We have to send a message to the administration that we are sick and tired of it taking arbitrary actions without .: sw).(otii...the r x • MK 1 against schools consulting the Legislature," said Rep. Thomas McCall, D-Carbon. Thornburgh opposes the amendment because he feels it would hamstring his efforts to cut the state budget. In a related development, Thornburgh announced that the nursing schools would remain open for two more years to allow all of their students to graduate. Ashland students would go to the Hazleton school. In announcing his : decision, Thorn burgh said it "remains clear that tax funds should no longer be used to operate these schools in the long term." When one legislator suggested that the anti-shutdown legislation was un constitutional because it infringes on the executive branch's rights, Rep. William Hutchinson, R-Schuylkill said: "No matter what amendment we pass it will be found to be unconstitutional by the administration. "Let it (constitutionality) be decided by the courts," Hutchinson said. ,~ .. horizon! Get rid of those DORM :EJECT BLUES! Why be isappointed? Call the IOWNTOWN GROUP for ring space. There's a lace for you at ;EDARBROOK, PENN 'OWERS, BEAVER HILL or lARNER COURT. 9 & 12 ionth leases available. ro CALL TODAY 37-0363. Managed by A.W. & Son• Enterprise ka.cls - our tasted claitiouts a ~ ,ridkeJ - 841 ' CheelP 101-1 egjAc/61 THO TRAIN - 401W 9 45. SE I RVED WI Til 9se klifAtrioJ\T-13AdD E,0116 1 atrzg ttS.J •••-.o° t 0 OFF ALL including s, Womensware, Studen Antidraft leaders demand census use clarification WASHINGTON (UPI) Antidraft leaders yesterday demanded President Carter immediately clarify administration statements suggesting it might use census in formation to" search out draft resisters. "With 'Census Day' only one week away, it is vital that the relationship between census-taking and the president's • . proposed draft registration be clarifed im mediately," the Rev. Barry Lynn, chairman of the Committee Against Registration and the Draft, told a news conference. Lynn released a letter he wrote to Vincent P. Barabba, director of the Bureau of the Census, raising questions about a statement by a top Office of Management and Budget official suggesting information from the census could be used in deter mining the extent of resistance to registration. FAMILIES ARE FOREVER speaker: Charles Taylor, Ph.D Professor of Human Development film: Why Mormons Build Temples date: Tuesday, March 25 time: 7:00-8:00 p.m. place: Reading Room HUB Presented by: The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter Day Saints Student Assoc. (the Mormons) 0.166 • HAVE YOU EVER \BEEN STUCK WITH A COMPUTER COLLIE in FROM A COMPUTER DATE MATCH? Hours: Mon-Sat 9:30-5:30 Mon. & Fri. until 9:00 Well, no longer need you worry about imper sonal and incompatible computer matches. Now, the Video Dating Services so popular on the West Coast are available in Happy , Valley. For a small membership fee, you view video tapes of other members. You decide which tapes to view and you decide whom you desire to meet. As a special introductory offer get one month's membership for only $lO.OO. Special rates are in effect for non-students also. Why waste time and money trying to meet members of the opposite sex socially, try a membership at Video Services and see what develops. VIDEO SERVICES 323 East Beaver Avenue • The statement, by OMB deputy director John White, was made before the Senate' Subcommittee on Appropriations March 11. During the hearings, White testified: "Finally, at the time 0f registration, because of the data base with respect to census and others, we can have a good sense of whether or not we have a problem with respect to the number of people not registered." Lynn, in his letter to Barabba, said it was "shocking" , that • the ad ` 4 ministration "would even consider permitting the direct or indirect use of census data given by parents to locate and then prosecute and im prison their children." Lynn urged parents to "delay an- o , swering questions about their children as long as legally per missible, or until the administration clarifies its posture." A Pail rcarlin3 Restauraht tru Melia/ Or CcualE 4 Ca A RIDER, Night receptionist job evaluated By IRIS NAAR Daily Collegian Staff Writer 11 The night receptionist system in the dormitories is effective for the most part in providing a feeling of safety for residence hall students, Assistant Director for Residential Life Stan Latta said. 0 "We like to think it is successful and helpful," he said. "It does what it has to do." In a' poll of 1000 men and women conducted by a`subcommittee of the Association of Residence Hall Students last 'term, 450 students, of the 95 percent who responded, do not feel' safe in their dormitories, com pared to 501 students who do feel safe. Latta said the duties of a night receptionist include sitting in a location where the main entrance can he monitored, checking that doors are closed and locked properly, • checking keys of residents and also making sure that all guests are escorted by a resident and are signed in. The assistant coordinators in each - residence hall area choose the night receptionists each term, Latta said. At Most students receive jobs through the work-study ; program, although several are hired" through, the wage . payroll system, he said. w South Halls Administrative Assistant Connie Zelezen (12th-health • administration) works with the 111 assistant coordinator in selecting and : supervising night receptionists in : that residence hall area. Zelezen said she feels the program hasn't been 100 percent perfect."l know there is a question of how much "..'• they should do. If there is somebody IP who' is going to break in, there is 'no 4 . way to stop, them." 4- However she said the night receptionist program has been p successful in giving a sense of security to residents. Ann Geitner (3rd-architecture) said one evening no receptionist showed up at her dorm in South Halls after midnight. Geitner's resident assistant could not find any replaceMent for the receptionist, so Geitner and two other girls volun teered to act as night receptionists for that evening. She said she and the two other girls were briefed thoroughly as to what the responsiblities of the job were. The receptionist who was supposed to be on duty that evening arrived at about 2 that morning and gave the girls _the impression that he was willing to take over the job from that point on, and wanted to be paid, Geitner said. Geitner and the two other girls told the receptionist that they were- staying for the entiiT evening 111 WAY PIZZA PUB -4,,1) rolleire a l'. - Corner of College & Heister 237-5718 Try our Luncheon Specials something different every day! STUDENT SPECIALS Monday & Tuesday. Nights 50' off 16" Pizza and small sodas 15' with this purchase. serving Pepsi-Cola HAVE A DEGREE I SCIENCE OR ENG .111 " 1"1. If so, put that degree to work in the United States Air Force. The Air ForCe has job openings for science and engineering officers in many professional areas. Find out if one of them is yours. Then ask about that excellent Air Force salary ... the executive experience .. . the worldwide assignments . liv ing quarters . . . 30 days of paid vacation a year . • . medical and dental care . . . and many other Air Force benefits. It's one of the finest opportunities in the nation. For information, contact MSgt Larry Renoe, (814)237-7741 or 237-7739, 301 S. Allen Street, State College, PA 16801. , One girl signed as the night receptionist, and the three girls split the pay for the evening, Geitner said. She said she was suprised when an RA became "very indignant" when the girls asked to see her key that evening. Geitner said she and the other girls were not aware that the person was an RA, and that RAs sh9uld also realize that the rules must be followed. East Halls Assistant Area Coor dinator Joe Trippi said he does not see any substitution for the present night receptionist program. He said the system is an effective limiter of problems at the residence halls, but the buildings cannot be secured entirely. Students must be conscious of their own safety, Trippi said. For instance, some residents prop the side doors open for easy entrance, he said. 'RSCs -- `l3o In contrast to other residence hall areas, a North Halls student is the primary organizer of the night receptionist program in her area. Sandy Boyd (9th-individual and faMily studies and psychology), said she, feels the night receptionist program has been successful. She said she has received cooperative and helpful workers. Boyd said in warm weather doors seem to break and are more difficult to check. However, she said she cannot find any room for im provement in the present system at this time. Receptionists do not complain very often about lack of cooperation from students, Boyd said. On Saturday nights, when many students drink, more problems arise, but the receptionists have "pretty good working relationships," she said. Trippi said some students feel that it is a big ordeal to pass through a night receptionist. "Men sometimes see it as an infringement or a hassle," he said. Andy Mozenter, an assistant coortlinatort - at , SOuth'llalls, - Said the • South 'V I IIIs area has teen ,lucky in NEERING? l i iiii 'ilihi, „ , . ~ i! i , ..".1,.. l.l 11 1 I l i (, 1 4 1 . , . , !;11 . 11 .1: ', . i i l 111111111111 II I 11 1 , i 1 i 1 1111114 . 110114,1 1 11111410 ';01.1111111 prio.ncio A great way of life r- r i: -- . 1 - - \ I . 5F r. \ ...1 ‹..e.. • ) , r zr. . 111 ,1111 regard to cooperation from students. Mozenter said the only major com plaint in South Halls lies with sorority members, who come back into the dorms after a party in a group. Since they are not closely bound to Residential Life programs, they may not want to be as cooperative to the receptionists, he said. Zelezen also said non-sorority students are usually cooperative, but that sorority members sometimes do not wish to comply with the system. Kelly Brown (3rd-architecture), a sorority member in South Halls, said she feels the night receptionists are necessary, but that they need to be coordinated better and counseled more about the job. Brown said receptionists sometimes do not arrive to work on time, and the back doors are unlocked, though it doesn't happen very often. She also said when she has arrived at a residence hall with a large number of people, the recep tionist doesn't bother checking the keys of everybody sometimes. Latta said he is not aware of too many problems involving night receptionists and students. "I haven't heard of many students having complaints or being hassled by night receptionists, or vice versa," Latta said. However, when night recep tionists were placed in male dorms after large amounts of vandalism where found, the receptionists received a lot of "flack," he said. Eric Phillips (7th-biology) said he basically doesn't mind passing through a night receptionist when he goes to a girls' dorm. "Night is always a good cover for somebody to get away with something," he said. "The university is just trying to deter. it." However, Phillips said he became mad last year when a receptionist was placed in his all-male dorm in Centre Halls during finals week. He said he had to call for his roommate because he had forgotten his key, and was not allowed to go to his rp9m,until A Day Never Passes When You Don't Need One. OPEN DAILY 9:30-5:30 r, ' '''' ,' ' ':‘•• , , , . ;. . .:• 1•• ',• . . .: v sv , . • • • , ~ - Tuesday Special Hamburger plus your choice of our special soups or create a salad from our 12' salad bar only $1.99 The PRESS BOX is located on 129 S. Pugh Street in downtown State College. across from the parking garage. his roommate arrived. Phillips said he feels that some of the receptionists in the female dorms could be more pleasant. He said when he is signing in, he sometimes is made to change the time he wrote on the sign-in sheet when his watch differed only slightly from the night receptionist's watch. Some receptionists take the job just for the money involved, and are not effective, Phillips said. He said receptionists sometimes do not require an entire name to be signed, or don't even look at residents' keys. However, one ineffective receptionist cannot represent them all, he said. Training for night receptionists must be the best possible, Latta said. "Some people don't take the job seriously," he said. Joe Ciliberto (Bth-architectural engineering), a night receptionist in South Halls for two terms, said he has not had any trouble from students while on the job. "I keep everybody out who's not supposed to be in," he said. "The night receptionist can't do it all himself," Ciliberto said. "The people have to cooperate too." Cheryl Love ( 3rd-mechanica I engineering) said she feels the night receptionists are necessary, but she does not see the sense in signing in when she does not have her key. Love said when she signs. the sheet, the receptionist has no proof that she is not impersonating another person in the dorm. The same result can be acheived by checking the residence hall roster, she said. Love said if she leaves her building and returns in a few minutes, she still must show the receptionist her key, even though the receptionist just saw her leaving the building. Most night receptionists begin their jobs at mid,night. However, night receptionists at Simmons and McElwain Halls in Centre Halls begin their jobs at 8 p.m. Latta said the receptionists come on duty early in Centre Halls because there are large numbers of women and doors in the two halls. In ad dition, Simmons and McElwain Halls are frequently used as pathways from the center of campus. Lori Jo Sobrinsky (3rd-business), a night receptionist in Centre Halls, said the students are generally cooperative. "A lot of them are used to it now," she said. Sobrinsky said more problems occurred at Christmas time when parties were taking place and students tried to bring beer into the dorms. "I haven't had any trouble, though," she , „ _:~.: ow mu si mai =I me "NM I SPECIAL This Coupon Worth 10% OFF All Day Packs Expires April 1 ME =I ME EMI =I MR =I IWO a by North Face Sierra Designs Jan Sport Kelty MON. & FRI. TILL 9:OOPM Talk on international computers to be held • Dr. Gerhard Barth will speak on Computer Science in Germany and other international topics in computer science during the Computer Science Coffee Hour at 7 tonight in 325 Whitmore. All those interested are welcome. e Registration for men's intramural slow-pitch softball will continue today in Room 2 of the Intramural Building. Entries will be taken•in four divisions: dormitory, fraternity, independent and graduate-faculty. The deadline for registration is noon Thursday. For more information call 865-5401. • Red Rose Cotillion will give a con cert at noon today in the HUB main lounge. • APES will hold a general meeting at 7:30 tonight in 107 Carpenter. Films will Make a date Finding a date has come a long way from "standing on the corner and watching all the girls (or guys, as the case may be) go by. A new business called Video Services offers a new dimension in looking for a partner. Offered by General Photographic, 323 E. Beaver Ave., the service makes video tapes of prospective dates, and then allows them to view tapes of other members. "It's more personal than a computer datematch," said owner Brent Werner. "If a computer matches people ac cording to two or four areas of interest, that doesn't necessarily mean that those two people will be compatible." Just because two people enjoy Johann Sebastian Bach's music doesn't mean they will be physically attracted to each other, Werner said. The result is often impersonal like a blind date, he said. "Normally with our service, people will peruse membership cards with pictures and information on them before asking to view a tape," Werner said. "If O•Oe011011OS0®OA000■OO000Y0® • • FSHA 330 DINNERS • Stuffed Chicken $l.BO • • is • m Broccoli casserole $1.60 • • Ratatouille, Chef Salad, s • • • more • • • 5: 15 -6: 15 Tonight 0 • • • Ground Floor, HD ev 111 • • : m a "IT'S ALMOST LIKE WE • a • GIVE FOOD AWAY" a • II •1110114111111110111•111011•11011011101111•1101111 Make-overs and skin care discussion by a make-up artist from Diane von Furstenburg Cosmetics ... followed by a Spring Fashion Show presented by Anne Abbott with fashions contributed by Tonight 7:00 p.m. U-030 The Inlet of Beaver and Pugh Sts. Panhellenic Council presents... Women's Awareness Week 3-24 thru 3-30 Mr. Charles Bumble Bee ICEBP HAPPY VALLEY BEAWMUL. DON'T LIT TOR. Feeling Of Spring Is With You ~i~ The Daily Collegian Tuesday, March 25, 1980-5 be shown • The Economics Club will meet at 7:30 tonight in 420 Kern. • The Folklore Society will sponsor Appalachian Music and Dance for beginners and experts tonight in :301 HUB. The music will begin at 7:30 and the dance will start at 8. • A Colloquy general membership meeting will be held at 7 tonight in 320 HUB. • The American Association of University Women is asking for donations to their book sale on April 21. Books may be taken to Thrift Drug Store in the Westerly Parkway Shopping Center and Schlow Library, 100 E. Beaver Ave. by videotape a member decides he would like to meet someone on a tape, we will release the name and number to him or the person on the tape may view his tape first, depending on what each person requested when he signed up." Reaction to Video Services has been good, according to Werner. He has been making legal and industrial videotapes for two years, and decided to start the service "because there is nothing like it around here." A similar business started on the West Coast has been very successful, Werner said. Although it is aimed towards University students, anyone is welcome to use the service. Members must sign a release form that protects General Photographic from any damages that result from the match. Current membership fees are $2O for the rest of Spring Term. "It's something different; we'll give it a shot," Werner said. The Racquet Shop tAfi •;t•11 : N , 0111 • C Euphydryas phaeton Alp , 44. :1' • 0 ';' nthocara tnidea oniur USA & LIMOGES 'y, Americana ge, PA 16801 (814) 238-7833 —by Joyce Venezia Lady Bug Mode HUB Ballroom ser Street Suite D ipal Building)