The daily collegian. (University Park, Pa.) 1940-current, July 31, 1981, Image 3

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Arms shipped to Cuba
Haig says USSR sends 'near-record amounts'
WASHINGTON (AP) Secretary of State Alexander M.
Haig Jr. said yesterday that the Soviet Union is sending
weapons to Cuba in near-record amounts this year and that
some of the arms are being re-shipped to Central America.
If the present pace of arms shipments to Cuba is maintained,
it would double the 1980 total and would be the most for any
year since 1962, the year of the Cuban missile crisis, Haig said.
"While most of the tonnage is believed to be earmarked for
Cuba's regular armed forces and its newly created territorial
militia," Haig said, "There is solid evidence that some of the
goods are being reshipped to Central America."
'The current state of affairs in the
Congress regarding security
assistance is alarming. This short
sighted approach to security
assistance cripples our foreign
policy.'
—Alexander M. Haig Jr.,
secretary of state
Haig made his remarks in testimony prepared for the Senate
Armed Services Committee. The meeting was closed, but the
State Department released copies of his prepared testimony,
which dealt with coordinating the nation's military strength
with its foreign policy.
The State Department has said previously that Soviet bloc
arms were being shipped through Cuba to El Salvador and
Nicaragua. While Haig has threatened to go to "the source" to
stop the arms shipments, meaning Cuba, he has never
elaborated on the threat.
Guerillas end cease-fire in mideast
: TEL AVIV, Israel (AP) Palestinian guerrillas
briefly shelled a Christian town in southern Lebanon
• last night, violating the week-old cease-fire mediated by
the United States along the Lebanese border, Israel
• Radio said.
No group immediately claimed responsiblitiy for the
:• attack, but Israeli-backed Christian militias did not
return the fire that fell for several minutes on the
Christian town of Deir Aames, eight miles north of the
Israeli border, the radio said. There was no immediate
report of casualties or damages.
Maj. Saad Haddad, whose Christian forces control a
small enclave in southern Lebanon, told Israeli report
• ers after the shelling yesterday that he would seek
Israeli permission to return the guerrilla fire.
In a related incident, Israel and Syria traded threats
after Israeli planes downed a Syrian jet fighter over
Lebanon and Palestinian guerrillas attacked a bus
outside of Jerusalem, wounding four people.
Royal. Couple:
sausages, fish
:and swimming
ROMSEY, England (AP) The
:Prince and Princess of Wales may have
eaten sausages for breakfast, gone for a
:swim, or fly-cast for salmon in the River
:Test yesterday, the first day of their
honeymoon.
But no one was saying for sure. The
:couple remained in seclusion at the
Mountbatten family estate of the Broad
:lands.
, Buckingham Palace insisted on corn
•plete privacy for Prince Charles and his
:20-year-old bride, the former Lady Diana
-Spencer, after their spectacular wedding
:in London on Wednesday.
The couple did "look very happy," a
police chief in charge of tight security at
;the Hampshire mansion told reporters
:after seeing the heir to the British throne
and his princess strolling hand-in-hand
"across the spacious lawns of the home of
'the late Earl Mountbatten of Burma.
Chief Police Superintendent Alan Lem
ish added: "We are trying to give them
total privacy until they leave Broadlands
on Saturday," when they fly to Gibraltar
to board the royal yacht Britannia for a
two-week Mediterranean cruise.
' Police disclosed that minutes before
the couple arrived Wednesday evening,
following the wedding ceremony in Lon
don watched by 700 million people around
the world, five local youths scaled a wall
'and dropped into the grounds of the 5,000-
acre estate.
They were immediately picked up and
Attorney General
William French Smith
The official wedding group poses in the throne room of Buckingham Palace. From left to right, back row: Edward van
Cutsem, Lord Nicholas Windsor, Sarah Jane Gaselee, Prince Edward, Prince Charles and the Princess of Wales, Prince
Andrew, Lady Sarah Armstrong-Jones. Front row: Catherine Cameron, India Hicks, Clementine Hambro.
sent home without being charged,
according to Hampshire police.
The honeymoon is "entirely private,"
according to a Buckingham Palace
spokesman who said no information
would be released.
The New Standard, a London newspa
per, reported that Bioadlands cook Eliz
abeth Thornton prepared a
honeymooners' breakfast of kedgeree (a
New immigration policy unveiled
By ROBERT B. CULLEN
Associated Press Writer
WASHINGTON (AP) Declaring that "we have lost control
of our borders," the Reagan administration unveiled a new
immigration policy yesterday that seeks congressional appro
val of an experimental "guest worker" program and stiffer
enforcement measures against illegal aliens.
The president's package also would make it unlawful, unlike
the case now, for employers to knowingly hire workers who are
not authorized , to be in the country. But it offers a legalization
program for those already here.
At the same time, it calls for swifter deterrent actions,
including the authority to intercept and turn away boats
coming toward the United States with illegal migrants. Such
moves, presumably, would be aimed principally at any future
boatlifts from Cuba or Haiti to the shores of Florida.
"Last year, the number of immigrants legally and illegally
entering the United States reached a total possibly greater than
any year in our history, including the era of unrestricted
immigration," Attorney General William French Smith told a
joint House-Senate hearing.
UPI wirephoto
State Department officials said Wednesday that the
department is actively at work on the administration's policy
toward Cuba.
While Haig did not provide any figures on Soviet arms
shipments to Cuba, Haig was quoted in an interview with the
Boston Globe on Wednesday as saying the Soviets shipped
40,000 tons of sophisticated arms to Cuba during the first seven
months of the year. An aide to Haig confirmed the statement.
In his congressional testimony yesterday, Haig complained
that while the Soviets are increasing arms shipments to Cuba,
Congress resists approving the administration's military
assistance program.
"The current state of affairs in the Congress regarding
security assistance is alarming," Haig said. "This short
sighted approach to security assistance cripples our foreign
policy and places U.S. credibility on the line."
Haig said the Soviet Union spent $l6 billion last year on arms
for developing nations, including Cuba, while the United States
"transferred only $lO billion in equipment."
The request for security assistance funds is contained in the
administration's foreign aid bill, which has encountered
serious resistance in Congress.
The previous Congress also declined to approve the Carter
administration's aid package two years in a•row. Instead, the
nation's assistance effort stayed at old spending levels under a
continuing resolution.
"I must state in all candor that we are liable to serious
consequences if we do not remedy this depressing situation in
fiscal year 1982," Haig told the armed services committee.
Haig said security assistance provides political, financial and
military backing to the nation's defense strategy. "In a number
of cases, it is the most efficient way to defend U.S. interests in a
particular area; in some cases, it is the only way."
Other nations can make cash purchases of U.S. military
equipment without a security assistance program. The
program is needed to provide low-cost financing for weapons
purchases by nations which lack adequate financing of their
own.
"An expanded security assistance budget is an essential part
of the arms transfer effort," Haig said.
Israel said it might retaliate for Wednesday night's
bus attack and Syria said Israel would "pay dearly" if it
continued reconnaissance flights over southern Leb
anon like the one that resulted in Wednesday's dogfight.
One of the wounded in the bus attack, 23-year-old
Devorah Arnett, was in serious condition after a bullet
hit her stomach and killed her unborn baby, in its
seventh month.
Several other reported violations of the 'truce were
reported by Palestinian guerrilla factions, but the
Israelis and their Lebanese allies say they have not
fired back.
The official Syrian newspaper Tichrin editorialized
that Syria would go on "defending Lebanon's safety and
security against Israeli aggression" and would "make
the aggressor pay dearly at present and a dearer price
in the future."
The Palestine Liberation Organization and Syria
insist that the cease-fire applies to Israeli reconnais-
fish and rice dish), sausages, bacon,
kidneys and eggs.
But the estate's general manager, Bob
Pullin, saying "Broadlands regards the
royal honeymoon as being private and
therefore can't comment on any aspects
of it," called the report not entirely
accurate. He declined to say more.
Bernard Aldrich, 52, local bailiff or
superintendent for the River Test, which
Once, the ilk gal migrants generally took agricultural jobs in
the Southwest. But Smith said', the illegal aliens are now
working all over the country. Only 15 percent work in agricul
ture; 50 percent work in service jobs and 30 percent have blue
collar jobs, he said.
Sndith chaired' a Cabinet task force that wrestled with the
immigration problem for several months. His presentation to
'Congress was delayed twice this month while the final details
were debated.
sance flights over Lebanon as well as exchanges of fire
on the border and Israeli bombing raids on Lebanese
territory.
Uri Porat, Prime Minister'Menachem Begin's spokes
man, warned that the cease-fire "does not give the PLO
immunity of any sort" from punishment for attacks like
the bus ambush.
He said that as far as Israel was concerned there was
not a formal cease-fire, just a lull on the Lebanese
border. Neither side recognizes the other.
In Washington, the State Department issued a
statement "deploring" the bus attack.
PLO leader Yasser Arafat has said the truce along the
border would not halt guerrilla activity from the West
Bank of the Jordan River or the Gaza strip.
In Beirut, a spokesman for the right-wing Christian
Phalangists said the group's military commander,
Bashir Gemayel, left yesterday for Washington to meet
with Secretary of State Alexander M. Haig Jr.
Smith, who declared "we have lost control of our borders,"
estimated that three million to six million illegal aliens now live
in the United States; about half are from Mexico.
The administration proposals include
• An experimental "guest worker" program that would
allow employers to import 50,000 laborers from Mexico annual
ly for two years.
• Fines of $5OO to $l,OOO for employers of more than four
people who knowingly hire illegal aliens.
• A two-track legalization program that would give as many
as five million illegals now in the country a chance to enter a
new legal category, "renewable term temporary resident."
Sen. Barry Goldwater, D-Ariz., seated,
members of the Senate Armed Services
meanders through the grounds of Broad
lands, said he prepared fishing tackle for
the newlyweds in case they wanted to
cast for river salmon.
"I got the rods and reels ready early
on. The conditions are perfect today," he
said. The tackle included the late Lord
Louis Mountbatten's favorite reel.,
Charles' great-uncle was slain by an
Irish Republican Army bomb in 1979.
shares a joke with Secretary of State Alexander M. Haig Jr. (left) and other
Committee John Tower, R-Tex., (right) and Roger W. Jepsen, R-lowa.
news briefs
Navy cruise missile crashes
WASHINGTON (AP) A Navy attack version of the Tomahawk
land attack cruise missile failed cruise missile from submarines.
during a flight test yesterday and The Pentagon announcement said
crashed onto the Nellis range in initial information reported no per-
Nevada, the Navy announced. sonnel injuries or damage to prop-
The Navy did not disclose the erty in yesterday's missile crash
nature of the failure of the missile, during what was described as the
which it said was fired from the final phase of the mission.
submerged submarine Guitarro off According to the Pentagon, "a
the California coast. difficulty" of an unspecified nature
occurred before the missile "im
pacted the ground" on the Nellis
range.
The failure followed two claimed
successes in flight tests by the land
Boy, 1 5, charged in murders
OLD FORGE (AP) A 15-year- at Lackawanna County prison fol
old neighbor will be tried as an adult lowing his arraignment on charges
for the shotgun slayings of Cheryl of criminal homicide, kidnapping,
Ziemba, 8, and her 4-year-old broth- and hindering an investigation and
er, Christopher, authorities said yes- arrest. District Attorney Ernest
terday. Preate Jr. said the probe would
Joseph Gerard Aulisio was ar- continue and that Aulisio would be
rested by state police early yester- tried as an adult.
day morning at his house. Aulisio The children's bodies were discov
lives with his father and 17-year-old ered Tuesday in an anthracite dump
brother, about a block from the in the area. Cheryl had been shot in
house where the children lived with the head with a shotgun and Christo
their parents, Chester and Diane pher had been shot in the chest, both
Ziemba. from a distance of about 10 feet,
Aulisio is being held without bail according to the autopsy report.
BEIRUT, Lebanon (AP) At
least 1,200 people were killed in the
latest Iranian earthquake, Tehran
Radio reported yesterday, while a
U. N. representative put the toll at
8,000 dead and 60,000 injured.
The U.N. spokesman said 1,000
people were also missing. It was the
second quake in the area in six
weeks.
Tehran Radio said the town of Sirj,
25 miles from the provincial capital
of Kerman was the worst hit.
UPI wirophoto
WARSAW, Poland (AP) Thou- Solidarity leaders in Lodz, a city of
sands of women and children 840,000, said from 8,000 to 10,000
marched through Lodz, the nation's people marched through the city's
second-largest city, yesterday chan- center carrying banners that read
ting against food shortages and car- "We want to eat" and "Hungry of all
rying banners that read, "We want nations, unite."
to eat."
New threats of strikes and pro- Women are an important part of
tests spread to all corners of Poland, the work force in Lodz, the nation's
including the declaration by the in- textile center about 80 miles south
dependent union Solidarity's power- west of Warsaw. Their S march
ful Warsaw chapter of a regional capped a four-day series'of parades
strike alert starting Monday. of buses, trucks and other vehicles
The union said bus drivers and driven by men to underscore public
streetcar operations in Warsaw anger over shortages, the proposed
have scheduled a three-hour warn- 20 percent cut in the meat ration for
ing strike next Wednesday and fac- August and a government proposal
tory workers will strike for two to raise the price of some staple
hours. foods by as much as 400 percent.
PHILADELPHIA (AP) Miss restraining order Weiner issued
Piggy became a federal court issue Monday after the newspaper filed
yesterday when The Bulletin asked suit, asking for a chance to bid or
that its rival newspaper, The Phila- negotiate for the muppet comic
delphia Inquirer, not be awarded a strip, while at the same time seeking
contract for the new "Muppets" an unspecified amount 41 damages.
comic strip. King Features had awarded the
Bulletin publisher N.S. Hayden comic strip contract to the to the
and Richard Fales, national sales Inquirer because it said it received
director for King Features Syndi- no bid from the Bulletin:
cates which sells the comic strip, The "Muppets" strip, featuring
offered conflicting testimony before Miss Piggy, Kermit the Frog and the
U.S. District Court Judge Charles R. rest of the gang, is scheduled to
Weiner about a crucial telephone debut Sept. 21, costing newspapers a
call made during the bidding. minimum of $lOO daily and $l3O for
The Bulletin is trying to extend a the Sunday edition.
Death toll rises in Iran quake
Poles: 'We want to eat'
Miss Piggy goes to court
Friday, July 31 4
it k. IC/Tehran
IRAN
1 4 , Kerman Province
afilerman
r•ci•
SAUDI ARABIA
UPI wirepholo
-400 miles
UPI illustration
Summer Term: slower pace and a sunny place
By MIKE HEIMOWITZ
Daily Collegian Staff Writer
Besides the freshmen the University admits each Summer
Term, thousands of other students choose to remain in Happy
Valley during the summer.
But why do so many stay here during their supposed summer
vacation? The reasons vary as much as central Pennsylvania's
weather, but the vast majority say .they do not regret their
decision.
Chris Ulicny (9th-agronomy) is carrying a full credit load
this term. He stayed here last summer also. Why? •
"So that I could graduate in the spring," he said. "I like the
summer because there are no crowds and it's really mellow.
The classes are a little less tense too."
Other students cited the more relaxed atmosphere as a major
difference between the summer and the rest of the year.
"As they say, the summer is more laid back and easygoing
compared to the winter, spring or fall," Joe DiLazzaro (13th
broadcasting) said. "It's not as crowded, so you can go to bars
and other places and not ha;ie to worry about fighting through
people."
Some students mix a job and a light credit load to justify
living in State College during Summer Term.
Mike Miller (11th-electrical engineering) is taking one class
and working for the University about 20 hours a week this term.
Miller said he had a number of reasons for staying. '
"I wanted to make my last two terms better and have more
time for plant trips. I'm graduating in the winter," he said. "I
didn't have a really good job at home. This job has to do with
my major.
"Taking one class and having a job is the best thing I did in
school. I wanted to take it easy and stay for the summer to see
what it was like."
With a part-time job and just one class it would seem that
Miller has a lot of free time on his hands.
However, he said, "Sometimes I am bored and so I study. I do
waste a helluva a lot of time though, but it's fun."
John Strapple (9th-English education) is taking three credits
Student, faculty views of
•
Continued from Page 1.
"Many students then blame the faculty (adviser) when told of their lack," he
said.
Kavanaugh also cited instances of students claiming that faulty advising caused
their program deficiencies.
But he said sometimes this complaint was valid.because overbearing advisers
did mislead students into taking unnecessary courses using their approval/disap
proval power to pressure the advisee into agreement.
Wright said he thinks "phantoms" students who are self-signing and who do
not consult with their adviser lose the benefit of an intelligent discussion of their
academic program with someone trained to help them.
The dangers are great for students who fail to stay up-to-date with changing
requirements, but an occasional meeting' with an adviser can avoid these
problems, he said.
"It is infuriating to have students who don't come in so that you don't even have a
chance to help them," Wright said.
"I think what the senate (in its May 5 legislation) was trying to do was to
rationalize a situation that has existed for some time," he said." Most faculty, and
I think rightfully so, recognize that what counts here in terms of promotion and
tenure is research and teaching. However, there are a number of faculty who do a
fantastic job and who are committed and give hours of their time with students and
are good advisers." •
Wright referred tb a study made by assistant dean of the. College of The Liberal
Arts, John J. Romano, that found among faculty, graduate students and under
graduates, the graduate students were the most effective academic advisers.
Wright said that his experience,supports the finding of this study.
USG President Bill Cluck said he thinks many faculty members let pressure to
publish override their roles as advisers because advising does not figure high in
tenure considerations.
Kavanaugh said the amount of emphasis placed upon advising in faculty
evaluations varies from college to college and is reflected in the attitudes toward
L s
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RED ROSE
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111 5& 10 p.m. Happy Hour prices H110:30
this term. He returned to the University after taking off a few
terms to work at home.
"I needed a vacation from home," he said. "I expected the
summer to be mellow and have a more relaxed atmosphere,
and it's definitely more mellow'than the regular year."
How does Strapple fill his idle hours?
"I get bored at times. I write to amuse myself. It's not all that
bad," he said.
But not all of the students who elected to spend their summer
in Happy Valley expressed satisfaction with their decision.
Merrit Donahue (6th-broadcasting) said, "It's been boring. I
expected it to be a blast."
Donahue 'stayed because she "didn't want to go back home
and couldn't afford to live at the shore."
Luke Taiclet (10th-history) has spent seven summers in the
area, both in and out of school. Summer is his favorite term.
"There is a relaxed, cultural atmosphere with the Summer
Festival, the occasional concerts and the Arts Festival if you
stay away from the booths," he said. "Students spend the
greater part of four years at Penn State in a very competitive
atmosphere. All that stuff disappears in the summer. It gives
them a chance to see the University in a different atmosphere."
Some students stay in the area without working or taking
classes. Kim Painter (10th-advertising) chose this alternative.
"I don't get bored. I read a lot and draw and spend a lot of
time outside. I live downtown so I go up on the (campus) lawns
and play Frisbee," she said.
Although she is living on limited funds, Painter said she is
still able to enjoy the summer.
"I always have money to do something if I really want to do
it. I'll buy 30-cent pot pies so I can go to the bars or something
like that," she said.
"I'm not a student (this term), but I can tell the pressure is
just not there. You don't have to be mobbed all the time. I like
Summer Term a lot."
One upperclassman who did not wish to be identified summed
up his justification for going to summer school in three - words:
"gullible freshmen women." • .
tomorrow
THE PHYRST
PHAMLY
r 1
self-advising policy vary
advising of professors in those colleges.
"Some people feel that the faculty have ducked the issue of advising," Cluck
said.
Cluck said he approves of the self-signing option for upperclassmen but said he
thinks the complexities of registration and their general inexperience make close
advising necessary for freshman. However, Cluck said freshman should question
why courses are recommended by their advisers and should assume a more active
role in the advising process.
"(Advising) doesn't mean that (advisers) are telling you to take this course and
you have to take it," Cluck said.
Cluck said he chose the self-signing option of advising available to some
upperclassthen, but thinks that many students would not visit their adviser if they
were not so required.
"I think the majority of students can handle self-signing but I don't know if it's in
the University's best interests because of the potential for error or for someone
having a major problem and not being able to graduate because they missed a
requirement," he said.
Hopwood said, "I think the new policy is a disaster. I don't think it's going to
improve academic advising one bit and I think a lot of students are going to get
confused as to what's going on.
"To me, this worsens academic advising at an institution where academic
advising hardly exists to begin with," he said. "It's easy on the faculty members.
This is another example of how the faculty senate makes their job easier year by
year."
Hopwood said he thinks the new leg - thliiion on advising was instigated by faculty
involved in research who did not think they should have to act as advisers or who
did not feel qualified to advise. He also criticized the old system of advising for
many abuses including domineering advisers and students seeking a signature on
a form and nothing more.
Kavanaugh said the new legislation will prevent some advisers from pressuring
advisees through withholding approval. He said the new policies will also allow
advisers to indicate they disagree with obviously questionable actions by students.
UNIVERSITY CALENDAR
SPECIAL EVENTS
Friday-Sunday, July 31-Aug. 2
Friday, July 31
Fuel Science Seminar, 11 a.m., Room 301 Steidle. Dr. Harry Marsh, University
of Newcastle upon Tyne, England, on "The Reactions of Potassium Salts with
Carbonaceous Materials."
Wargame Club meeting, 6 p.m.-midnight Sunday, Rooms 101 and 132 EE East.
Interlandia Folk Dancing, 7:30 p.m., HUB Ballroom.
Commonplace Theatre, Take the Money and Run, 7:30 p.m.; Network, 9 p.m.,
Room 112 Kern.
High School Summer Music Camp Jazz Band Concert, 7:30 p.m., Recital Hall,
Music Building. Dr. Ned Deihl, Director. Walt Lamble, Choral Director. Open
to public. Admission free.
Festival Theatre, Ernest Thompson, On Golden Pond, 8 p.m., The Pavilion
Theatre; Jacobs/Casey, Grease, 8 p.m., The Playhouse.
HUB Movie, Evening with Star Trek, 9:30 p.m., HUB Lawn.
Saturday, August 1
High School Summer Music Camp Concert, 2 p.m., Eisenhower Auditorium. Dr
Ned Deihl, Director. Open to public. Fipe Admission.
Shaver's Creek Environmental Center, Traditional Folk Music Festival with
Caroline and Sandy Paton of Folk Legacy Records; 2 p.m.—children's get
together (free) at Shaver's Creek; 8 p.m.—Family Concert at University
Baptist and Brethren Church.
L-s,Reorganization meeting, 2:30 p.m., 227 HUB.
France-Cinema, Bertolucci, Last Tango in Paris, 7 and 9 p.m., Room 112 Kern.
Festival Theatre, Ernest Thompson, On Golden Pond, 8 p.m., The Pavilion
Theatre; Jacobs/Casey, Grease, 8 p.m., The Playhouse.
Sunday, August 2
Student Activities Pool Tournament, 1 p.m., HUB Billiard Room. Sign-up—
HUB Desk.
Festival Theatre, Ernest Thompson, On Golden Pond, 7:30 p.m., The Pavilion
Theatre; Jacobs/Casey, Grease, 7:30 p.m., The Playhouse.
Commonsplace Theatre, Take the Money and Run, 7:30 p.m.; Network, 9 p.m.,
Room 112 Kern.
Summer in Happy Valley means a normal credit load for some students, a part-time job , for others . , both for still others. But
for almost everybody including these sunbathers behind Park Hill it means some time spent enjoying the weather and
the more relaxed pace.
Students' opinions about advising reflect the variety quoted thus far. Some said
they prefer the self-signing option because it saves time. Another who needed an
assigned adviser's signature complained about being advised to take a course for
which the student was not prepared.
And Wright, who each Spring Term teaches a course in advising, said he thinks
advisers should reach out and actively pursue their advisees, especially if the
advising ratio or number of advisees per adviser can be improved.
Hopwood said he thinks the course audit now made in the student's 9th term
should be made earlier and more often. He also said students should change
advisers only when necessary so they can develop a good working relationship.
Kavanaugh said these changes are only the groundwork for an ongoing re
evaluation of the University's advising system that he thinks is at the heart of
undergraduate academic success. He said pressure from students is important:
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The Daily Collegian Friday, July 31, 1981—
Po l4 t rt°S
sTEAN
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1981 Pondetoso System, Inc
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Photo by Robert Hammer