4—The Daily Collegian Friday, March 20, 1981 A female recruit at the Parris Island Marine Recruit Depot practices with an M-16 rifle. The woman is part of the first group of women recruits in the Marine Corps history to receive combat training. Police raid, beat Poles WARSAW, Poland (AP) Police stormed the city declared a strike alert in response to the attack. Farmers in government headquarters in Bydgoszcz last night, beating Irowroclaw had earlier declared a sympathy strike alert, and forcibly evicting some 25 farm activists who had union sources said. refused to leave a meeting with local officials, the in- A union official said Walesa rushed to Bydgoszcz from his dependent trade union Solidarity said. home in the Polish shipping center of Gdansk. A spokesman said one person was hospitalized and the ' The clash came as a threat of new strikes spread to a others received minor injuries. region of 'northeastern Poland on the Soviet border, and as After the incident the most serious since labor unrest Polish officials discussed their nation's problems with other swept Poland last July Solidarity chapters in two nearby European leaders. cities announced a strike alert and union officials said In the capital, West German Foreign Minister Hans national Solidarity leader Lech Walesa went to Bydgoszcz, Dietrich Genscher met his Polish counterpart, Jozef 170 miles northwest of Warsaw. ' . Czyrek, for two days of talks expected to focus on East- Hundreds of regular and auxiliary police patrolled the West relations and Poland's multibillion-dollar foreign streets of Bydgoszcz after the incident, but the city of debt. . 350,000 was quiet, the Solidarity report said. Communist Party leader Stanislaw Kania made a sur . Union officials, who asked not to be identified, said the prise visit to Hungary, apparently to discuss economic and attack came after negotiations between Bydgoszcz officials labor troubles stemming from last summer's widespread and private farmers seeking an independent union broke labor unrest, which led to formation of the independent down. The union officials said the pOlice entered after the union Solidarity. provincial governor declared the session closed, but the In Budapest, Hungary's MTI news agency said Kania protesting farmers would not leave. was assured by his host of solidwrity with "efforts of Polish • Jan Rulewski, a leader of farmers sitting in at the nearby communists to restore social calm and order." headquarters of the United Peasants Party was The Polish news agency PAP said joint Warsaw Pact hospitalized, but the others received only minor injuries, a exercises were in their second day in Poland and bordering Solidarity spokesman said. • • Soviet bloc countrieslt gave no details of the exercises. Warsaw Radio reported later that police had been called State Department officials in Washington reacted in "to restore order and ensure the normal work of the ' moderately Wednesday to news of the exercises, ex iprovincial office' and that those who resisted were led out .pressing less, concern than in the past that the exercises ..of the building ,n: ° ' . " , , , might serve to apply military pressure on thc_lndependent , • I 1 The union 4Roke,sman Wd)hUndre'ds'd "supporters and labor movement and the Polish government. onlookers" had gathered outside the city government Strike threats spread around the country yesterday in • building but were unaware of the police assault until it was continued ferment by Polish workers seeking labor reforms over. from the government, as timberrnen in the southwestern A spokesman for the private farmers said their oc- town of Gorlice first set, then canceled a warning strike cupation of the peasant party headquarters would continue. over pay and working conditions, a union spokesman said. In Warsaw,. Solidarity officials announced that union A strike alert remained in effect for Gorlice and nearby chapters in Torun and Grudziadz, both near Bydgoszcz, had Opole, the spokesman said. Caller tells minister of Atlanta murders • ATLANTA C AP) A man who says he that he had an accomplice who has since • posed as a painter to lure youngsters left town. with job offers reportedly told a minister Paulk said the caller specifically in a telephone call that he was driven to claimed responsibility for the slaying of Some . kill four of the city's 20 slain black the latest victim, Curtis Walker, 13. work transit • gate of the 2,000 striking children by voices he "cannot get away Repeated attempts to reach Paulk workers cong rester at City Hall in from." were unsuccessful. Philadelphia yesterday to continue Public Safety Commissioner Lee P. The minister told the newspaper he Brown said he would have no comment was to have met with the man at 8 p.m. on the report by the Rev. Earl Paulk, . on the night of, the call, but the man which was carried in yesterday's failed to appear perhaps because of Atlanta Journal. • several police cars near the minister's Paulk said the man provided details of Chapel Hill Harvester Church in the crimes and motives during a six- to suburban DeKalb County. eight-minute telephone call at 7:20 p.m. But, Paulk insisted, "I was not a part March 10. Paulk said it was the first time whatsoever of any trap, and I will not he had spoken to this man, but he has be." He asked the man to again make received calls from several other people contact.' claiming responsibility for the slayings The man said he was 28, married and since he made a Feb. 14 televi s ed appeal the father of a 17-month-old child, Paulk foi• the murderer to surrender. said. "He seemed rather desperate from • According to Paulk. the man claimed two points of view. He was out of money that he posed as a painter offering part- and he was tired of running," the time jobs as is lure to the youngsters and - minister added. Brushfires force Florida evacuations Several hundred people evacuated the University of North Florida in Jacksonville as whipping winds spread nearby brushfires yesterday, police reported. Firefighters' in Jacksonville and . surrounding Duval County have been fighting stubborn blazes throughout the area since Sunday, and officials estimated that 11,000 acres have been charred. Little damage to buildings and no serious personal injuries have been reported in the northeastern Florida county. Duval Sheriff's spokesman Mike Gould said officials ordered the university evacuated as a precaution. Stock market down from apex of 1,000 NEW YORK (AP) The Dow Jones industrial average retreated further from the 1,000 level as the stock market turned in a mixed and erratic showing yesterday. The trend of stock prices varied widely, from one industry to another. Oil issues sold off, but savings and loan issues were strong following the recent decline in interest rates. The Dow Jones average of 30 industrials, which had crossed 1,000 briefly early in the week, dropped 7.48 to 986.58. ' Accused arsonist gives innocent plea LAS VEGAS, Nev. (AP) Philip Bruce Cline pleaded innocent yesterday to eight charges of murder and one of arson stemming from the fire at the Las Vegas Hilton hotel last month. A judge ordered him to stand trial July 6. Cline, 23, a former busboy at the Hilton, is being held without bond on charges of deliberately setting the Feb. 10 blaze that claimed the lives of eight people and left 192 others injured. The fire caused an estimated $lO million damage to the high-rise resort, the largest hotel in the United States and second largest in the world. Clad in jail garb and with his hands cuffed to a chain round his waist, the pale, slightly built Cline answered softly, "Not guilty, sir," when Clark County District Judge Adreliar D. Guy asked their picketing against the area's transportation authority. The walkout enters its sixth day today. him how he pleaded to the charges. During the three-minute arraignment, Cline answered a series of the judge's questions about whether he understood the charges against him with a quiet "Yes; sir." Cline's attorney, Kevin Kelly, said after the hearing he would file a writ in an effort to secure his client's release. He said Cline, who became ill with hepatitis shortly after his arrest, had not been able to assist in the preparation of his defense and "was denied the ef fective assistance of counsel." Kelly also said he was "still in vestigating" what he had previo . .sly said were reports that more than ane person may have been involved in set ting the blaze. Cline was arrested the day after the fire and allegedly told police he ac cidentally started the blaze while engaged in a sex act with a man he knew only as "Joe." Israeli labor leader meets with "Arabs TEL AVIV, Israel (AP) Israel Television reported yesterday that Shimon Peres, leader of Israel's op position Lahor Party, held secret meetings this week with King Hassan II Miners issued injunction • ~ PITTSBURGH (AP,) Striking coal be settled by arbitration. companies said their portal entrances , miners, believed responsible for wildcat "Like the judge said, most of the were quiet and that workers just didn'‘o: , picketing that idled some 6,000 United issues- we brought , up are arbitrable show up. ,, Mine Workers in . Pennsylvania, were under the contact. But if you stop and A U.S. Steel spokesman said 2,300 of its.,,, ordered back to work by a federal judge look at arbitration, 95 percent are in coal mine employees were idle,,,, yesterday. favor of the company and 5 percent are yesterday at five mines, including the„- r , U.S. District Judge Barron McCune in favor of the union. So most of these Cumberland portal. issued a temporary injunction directing issues we'll end up losing," said Br- The Jones and Laughlin Steel Corp. members of United Mine Workers Local nusak. said 1,000 of its workers remained off the , 0 2300 to be on the job at 12:01 a.m. this • "Most of the men at our mine and job in Greene County at its Vesta arld t 9) morning at U.S. Steel Corp.'s Cum- throughout our * district do not have any Nemacolin Mines. :!, berland Mine in Greene County. confidence in the grievance procedure," ' "We'll just have to go back to the union he added. Republic Steel Corp. said' 700 of its hall and get them to go back to work if Although the issues were local, Br- miners missed , work at two sites. And 1 ' we can," said local president Anthony nusak said the break in national Emway Corp. said some 450 workers • Brnusak. "That's the most we can do, negotiations with the coal industry and refused to work at its Emerald mine in . ' the best we can do." . Greene County. the possibility of a strike when the UMW AA The picketing 'began at the Cum- contract expires March 27 may have Consolidated Coal reported 210 miners :.. berland colliery Tuesday after six influenced his local's action. stayed away from a Washington County, ; . miners were suspended with intent to Following the walkout at Cumberland mine yesterday and Duquesne Light said ,t: discharge. They had been photographed on Tuesday, masked pickets fanned out 400 workers were off the job at its . • by company officials while picketing to other mines and • sparked work Warwick mine. • , 0 ,- March 6. stoppages across southwestern Penn- Nearly 780 United Mine Workers at McCune also ruled that the issues sylvania and northern West Virginia. two mines owned by the Florence Mining 4 ). involved in the Cumberland walkout, ' .There were scattered reports of roving Co. in Westmoreland County continued a, , including work schedules, safety and the pickets wearing ski masks at some of the work stoppage, a company spokesman use of non-union truck drivers, were to mine companies yesterday. Most said. •., •.. • • . . • ". • . ' .• • . •• • • • . ' . •.• .•,' ' • ,• •• • „:„ . • „ . • „. , • „. • „ „ ,•' • •• ...„:„ • „ , • . . • .• • .' a. tollegiCin : tn • ..•• .•. . • . . •••.. • . .r . • .. • • ••••••. ••.• • • - ••• •. • • ••••• .• ••••- • •••• .• . 1 • •-• . • •• , • • .•... • •-' • . • • . . . .• . ..•.. . • . • .. • ..• . •. • . UAW refuses wage concessions WASHINGTON (AP) The United collective bargaining agreement. , are far better off than Chrysler and that ':•' Auto Workers union declared yesterday "There is no justification for problems faced by the companies ". . '. , .i it will not grant to Ford and General reopening it nor could a change in it cannot be solved without the govern , Motors the kind of wage concessions its accomplish what has to •be done" to ment actions needed to change the un members sanctioned for financially revive the U.S. auto industry, the derlying conditions." strapped Chrysler Corp. councils said. By a 3-2 margin, UAW members at'o At the same time, UAW President . The councils said that under the UAW Chrysler Corp. voted in early February 'Douglas Fraser said the 1.2 million- constitution, there cannot be any to take a pay cut 'amounting to $46 a member union is considering a two-day collective bargaining on current or free month, removing an . obstacle to ilp strike to dramatize concern over the contracts without their express per- proval of additional loan guarantees for economic plight of the nation's mission. the putomaker. That decision put UAW. automakers and workers. • • Executives of. Ford and GM have workers at Chrysler behind their Ford Fraser said the union's executive expressed concern about the wage and GM counterparts for the first time. council has talked of such a shutdown, concessions the UAW Chrysler worker, • "If any company thinks this is an but that no decision has, been made. He • made to that company. opportunity to take advantage of UAW said the strike would. not be aimed at forcing enactment of legislation to On Sunday, GM Chairman Roger over the years, they are in for a shocking restrain Japanese auto imports. It would Smith said he expected the UAW to open surprise," Mark Stepp, the union's vice be "a broader demonstration," the union talks with GM and Ford on possible president, said at the time. chief said finished negotiating a profit-sharing '"political r'` • be negotiated by unions with '"Rolitical - The Ford and General Motors program with Chrysler. realities" in mind. But he expressed bargaining councils of the .UAW, con- Chrysler agreed to accept . profit hope that conditions in the industry will eluding a four-day meeting in sharing in exchange for union wage have improved vastly by the time the Washington, adopted a resolution op- concessions that helped win its latest union opens talks with Ford and GM. .. . posing any renegotiation of the existing $4OO million in federal loan guarantees. He said he was skeptical of renewed contract with the industry, which ex- "We have been a pattern industry," he talk of voluntary import restraints by 4) pires in September 1982. said at the time. "Now is the time for the Japanese. Rejecting% , - public statements - by profit sharing because it lets, the worker , "There's been so mai - 1y false signals, exeeutives 'l' Ford 'Motor" 'Co. and participate in his gfichTs ; iil&etlirekly.' ' 4 V it's hard for me to accept the fact that General`Motors Corp. suggesting Owen Biever, UAW vice president in • they're going to do anything meaningful financial sacrifices similar to those charge of GM affairs, said at yester- unless the (U.S.) government holds their made by Chrysler workers, the day's news conference in Washington feet to the fire," Fraser said. bargaining councils said, "We are that company labor relations executives "I think it's time for our government prepared to start at an early date on had broached the subject of contract to talk frankly and bluntly to the 19 preliminary work regarding the 1982 reopening.. "I've had some informal Japanese," he said. Fraser, also said, contract. That preliminary work would conversation," he said. however, "you can't draft legislation to not include any discussion regarding .• . The UAW's Ford and GM bargaining compel the Japanese to invest • in the hints about reopening the current councils argued that the two automakers United States.'.' of Morocco and a , brother of Jordan's King Hussein. It said Peres had a "long, private talk" yesterday in Morocco, with Hassan, who is considered one of the moderate Arab monarchs. In 1977, the Moroccan king hosted the secret meetings between Egyptian and Israeli leaders that led to Egyptian President Anwar Sadat's first journey to Jerusalem. It said Peres met earlier in the week in London with a relative of King Hussein described only as "a brother, but not Crown Prince Hassan." The report said Peres arranged both meetings to discuss Labor's so-called "Jordanian option," a confederacy plan to return the Israeli-occupied West Bank to Jordan in return for a peace agreement with the Hussein's Hashemite kingdom. Israel captured the West Bank of the Jordan River in the 1967 Mideast war. Most of the territory's population is Palestinian. Peres returned home last night, but refused to comment on the reported meetings to journalists at the airport. Justice Minister Moshe Nissim said the action warranted a check of whether Peres had violated Israeli laws by meeting enemy heads of state, Israeli television reported. wage concessions once .the union has The ieport came amid a heated election campaign -in which public opinion polls favor Labor over Prime Minister Menachem Begin's Likud bloc. Teacher attempt to block order fails LOS ANGELES (AP) A teachers' union failed yesterday to get a tem porary restraining order blocking an end to mandatory busing in the nation's , second largest school district next month. "The planning for dismantling the desegregation plan will go on," said school board attorney Jerry Halverson after the decision by Superior Court Judge David Eagleson. However, Eagleson did set an April 2 date for a hearing on a show-cause or der,. which the United Teachers of Los Angeles demanded in its suit against the school board. The, 30,000-member UTLA . has em phasized it is not opposed to ending busing but, believes' the school board's order to halt cross-town transportation of students in the middle of the spring semester will disrupt the educational process. ' 44 11. 4 6, Ar .. ~ , ',...: i . : ...,, : ., . .i . members and the gains they have won Fraser said any labor contracts must Theory announced in investigation WASHINGTON (AP) Secretary of State Alexander M. Haig . Jr., said yesterday that a piece of windshield glass embedded in the body of one of four Catholic women murdered in El Salvador has led investigators to theorize that the group may have tried to run a security roadblock. He called this "the most prominent theory" in the unsolved Dec. 2 murders of three Maryknoll nuns and a Catholic laywoman. Haig disclosed that an autopsy on one of the bodies "found that pieces of the 4 ' windshield had been propelled into her body by the bullet." "Some have constructed the theory that either they were perceived or may actually have been running a road block," Haig said. with: guerrilla said that in a country beset witho guerrilla warfare, local security forces "could have misread that vehicle down the road as an attempt to run a eoad , block." "And they could have fired into the vehicle, killed one or more of the passengers, panicked, killed the rest and tried to dispose of the evidence," he said. I. tINIEW YORK (AP) The medical munity, the board said the doctors' Under state law, a strike by public 14Wrd of Metropolitan Hospital warned absence "will place in jeopardy the employees is illegal. striking doctors-in-training yesterday training certificates" needed before At the urging, of Mayor Edward I. that their unauthorized absence would they can get licenses for private medical Koch, the Health 'and Hospitals Corp. imperil their careers. practice, asked the court to fine the union $lOO,OOO The board made the statement in for each day of the strike. The court also letters to members of the Committee of Officers of the union, saying more than was urged to fine union officers $250 and interns and Residents who walked off 1,350 doctors were striking for Penalize the doctors two day's pay for • tne job Tuesday, at seven municipal guarantees of adequate staff and each day on strike. . ~ 1 ' -V.' ' : , ,•! ' ....f! . ,• .A, , ' , t :.' ; „ ": '/. . ' .. ' 4111111 ." - OFFER EXPIRES APRIL 30,1981 .411111 1 111 Pr OFFER EXPIRES APRIL 30,1981 I bl MI 11111 rit/ Ell MO *on ME ll 111 pi NM 111 • COUPON COUPON Sco e S ecial I I Change Snow Tires I 1 gp &Rotate SAVE 8.50 SAVE $5.00 ; umettjurors reieased LOS ANGELES (AP) —At least half Tuesday night when he heard the questioned later said Wade came to the the'jurors in Carol Burnett's $lO million comedian begin discussing the jury room and told others what he had libel trial against the National Enquirer Enquirer. heard, according to the transcript of the heard about Johnny Carson's TV out- "Johnny Carson made a statement closed session. burst against' the publication and said that he was unhappy with the Enquirer Another two jurors told of hearing one panelist came to the jury room and because of an attack on him and his wife, fleeting comments about Carson's at told the others, according to a court and he was inviting the Enquirer to sue tack on the radio and two more said they transcript released yesterday. ' him," Reid told Superior Court Judge heard about it in the jury room. All said The transcript was ' released as at- - Peter Smith in chambers on Wednesday. they could put the matter out of their torneys for Burnett prepared to rest "I was kind of dozing," he said when minds and remain impartial. tir case later in the day. They said asked why he continued to watch it, As testimony resumed yesterday they had two more witnesses to call, disobeying the judge's instructions to before the 11 remaining jurors, counting while Enquirer attorney William avoid such publicity. "I don't know why I an alternate juror, Burnett's attorneys Masterson indicated he will call no didn't turn it off." called to the witness stand a. retired witnesses, so the case could go to the He was dismissed, although he said he professor of linguistics, Arthur E. jury Monday or Tuesday. could still be a fair juror. Hutson, who analyzed the content of the Masterson moved for mistrial Wed- Before he left the judge's chambers, National Enquirer article about the o,4sday on grounds that the entire jury Reid noted that the first thing he thought . entertainer. had been "tainted" 'by the discussion in when he heard Carson was "here's the "The average reader, I think, would the jury room Wednesday morning, but basis for another suit." conclude that the lady was drunk," the judge denied the motion after in- The second juror dismissed, Ernest L. Hutson said of the March 2, 1976, item terviewing each juror separately in his Wade, said he heard about Carson's that described Burnett as arguing with chambers. remarks on his car radio as he was then-Secretary of State Henry Kissinger, One juror who was dismissed, James coming to court. He said, "I already spilling wine on someone, "traipsing" rk, Reid, said he was dozing slightly and forgot about it by the time I got up here around the restaurant offering everyone watching the • "Tonight Show" on this morning," but another juror bites of her dessert and giggling. Board gives warnings to doctors hospitals, including Metropolitan in East equipment, returned to state Supreme The union said lives of patients were Harlem, and two private nonprofit Court for a second day of hearings. The being sacrificed because of hospitals.proceedings resumed in mid-afternoon "management inefficiencies." It said and could result in staggering fines for that if those problems were corrected, Vowing to keep Metropolitan open for contempt in refusal to obey a staff and equipment shortages could be the benefit of the surrounding corn- preliminary injunction. eliminated at little or no added cost. ifv, tooI IIONS PRIDE IcAtriI . .......-- sf f . :t • INTRAMURAL TEAMS In addition to our regular team discount T on clothing and equipment, have your ,0 1- team name imprinted 4 iii tol I I, t, J , o , 1,, ~ Large Selection 1 of molded cleat shoes in stock 6 A. NOW THRU APRIL 3 \ l ie 1 . .Attll),4*ff f.)r At! 04*14 e d p COUPON COUPON I Minor Tune-up I I Major Tune-up I SAVE $F 1000 4 Va. H SAVE $lOOOO4 CYL. REGULARLY $27.00 W OFFER EXPIRES APRIL 30,1981 W OFFER EXPIRES APRIL 30,1981 1111 10 lb MN Mil NM MO 1 I lk API 11 1 COUPON COUPON I Oil & Filter Change 11 State Inspection I • SAVE $5OO H SAVE $3.00 I REGULARLY $lB.OO REGULARLY $18.50 ... 411111111Pr OFFER EXPIRES APRIL 30,1981 \NI Mll 110 OFFER EXPIRES APRIL 30,1981 mis air * FREE On any of our stl In-stock jerseys r within,4B hours'. 114 EAST COLLEGE AVE STATE COLLEGE, PA . 234-2153 REGULARLY $45.00 REGULARLY $lO.OO REGULARLY $112.00 Lift that Huge cranes were used yesterday in Pittsburgh in an effort to set the sunken tow boat Monongahela upright: The boat was laying on its side after it sunk in the Allegheny River last month. It was the third time the boat has gone down. 1 . 4 i • CaIII • sex glossary published SACRAMENTO, Calif. (AP) The word "homosexual" curate and acceptable than "sexual preference" because might sound clinical, but some common words to describe "current research indicates that sexual orientation may people's sexual orientations should not be used at all, ac- not be a matter of choice." cording to a glossary published by the state of California. It says "homosexual" is acceptable, but can carry a "We've found that people don't know how to use the (gay) "formal, clinical tone." The acceptable term, it says, is language," said attorney Lee Walker, an avowed "gay and/or lesbian." homosexual who has served as the project's director for the "Dyke, fag and queer" are the equivalent of hate terms past 13 months, and is leaving fora new job. and "are cruel, derogatory and offensive, and should not be The guide notes that "sexual orientation" is more ac- used," the glossary said. BLUEGRASS NIGHT featuring recording artists The Buffalo Chipkickers Two Shows Sunday, March 22 8:00 & 10:00 p.m. HUB Ballroom plus a special concert broadcast by WDFM —Free Admission-- gal/Wm Concett Seties ..Tloduction a a R•02B Hetzel Union Board presents with special guest The Daily Collegian Friday, March 20, 1981—L ,•.•; • • 1 •' • 1 , ; • • • !.• ;• • it ' ••.,; •„, •,•, • , , , •'„ , , Whetstone Run UPI Wirephoto
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers