B—The Daily Collegian Friday, Dec. 11, 1981 Violations can carry double jeopirdy By RENAE lIARDOBY Daily Collegian Staff Writer If a student is charged on campus with a violation of both Pennsylvania law and the University's Code of Con duct he can be tried twice for the same offense. "Students have an obligation to the laws of the Commomwealth and the laws, or policy, of the University," Tom Harmon, manager of University Police Services, said. "In all cases where a student is involved in miscon duct or a violation, they are reported to the Office of Conduct Standards, and are therefore subject to discipli nary action," Harmon said. However, if the violation is one of Pennsylvania law as well, campus police will refer it to the State College District Magistrate, Clifford 11. Yorks, where the student will be sub jected to action as would any state resident, Harmon said. For example, a student caught for underage drinking on campus by Uni versity police will automatically be reported to the Office of Conduct Standards and to the district magis trate, Harmon said. The student will have to he tried in the Office of Conduct Standards, and also has to appear before Yorks in a hearing downtown to determine his guilt or innocence. Therefore, students can be tried twice for the same offense or crime, if they are caught and charged on cam pus. Although students have the most problems with underage drinking, they can be cited twice for a variety of offenses, Harmon said. The most common are criminal mischief, prop erty damage and theft, he said. . '...we're bound by University policy to take action if we have knowledge of a student's offense of that policy, even if the offense occurred off the campus.' But if a student is caught commit ting a crime off campus and is charged with a violation of Pennsyl vania law and University rules, he is not directly referred to the Office of Conduct Standards by State College police. "We do not furnish any information to anyone else," Lt. Jack Orndorf, State College police officer, said. Yet, students may be still cited and tried twice with an offense that oc curred off campus if Donald T. Suit, director of the Office of Conduct Stan dards, is made aware of it, Harmon said. analysis Police logs, newspapers and stu dents reporting other students for. violations are sources of information for his citing of students for off cam pus violations of University policy, Suit said. Anything that is an immediate or possible threat to the University, and that comes to the attention of Suit, will be dealt with according to the Univer sity's Code of Conduct even if such an offense occurs off campus, he said. More serious offenses such as rape, sale of a substantial quantity of drugs, theft from another student and as sault fall into the category of threats, Suit said. Even less serious violations occur ring off campus such as a criminal mischief charge for intentionally walking through wet cement that Donald T. Suit, director, Office of Conduct Standards Suit learns of arc subject to discipli nary sanction. "The only inequitable thing is that we're bound by University policy to take action if we have knowledge of a student's offense of that policy, even if the offense occurred off the campus," Suit said. Suit also said while he may review transcripts of a student's hearing in the magistrate's court, he is not per mitted to consider that court's deci sion when determining a student's sanction. "A student may be found guilty downtown and innocent on campus, and vice versa," Suit said. "And, he can be found guilty twice, he said." However, students aren't the only people at the University who must comply with both state laws and Uni versity rules. Faculty and other University per sonnel are also obligated to adhere to both sets of rules, Suit said. Since students can be tried and charged twice, they would have re cords of their violations in the magis trate's office and the Office of Conduct Standards. These records are kept for a certain period of time in both offices. "In our office, we keep all records, regardless of type of offense, for three years," a spokesman for the State College magistrate's office said. In the Office of Conduct Standards, records are kept until the student graduates. However, certain sanc tions, or penalties, for offenses will appear on the student's transcript. :;(11Z..;16;1 . 6 . ;,4111 . •;411 . :... 41 7.1•Nnc.:4i 'IIE Ex.: :.it :7113 M R; ;p-, V ." 'fk `. . ~,` \\*k 1 1 4 , , MILLER FILM Thrilling Ski ,'l Come See This d e- t &,. , •;',` ''''' I Movill:11:111:F On n i r ;7 1 d e a r y u ::: When:Two showings 15th 7 00 & 9 1 5 P m Tickets so s ld u a D t E t N h T e s d vv o n o p r 2 0 t V ),. : ADULTS 3.00 0 a ' 4 l * AD Sgtonsored by the Sklmont Skl S lt kA,H t 4 PnrodcLeaebdosrbsetnuedfitet:Frocnhotollaasdh" \ 4., \\\ Opening k Chrlstmas Holiday Week Look to us for ' \\ \ aYsus 'ng floods. LIONS BEAT USC 1 1 \ \\\ r ‘ \ AUST ASW TZERLAND \ GO LIONS B R EA: USCYS I O ..x FRANCE SOUAW MT VA B L A L K EY ER ‘ t, k„ .. . CANADA , N E I V I v A i M z M E A O C L T A O H N L :A R U A S D T O R A I DAH O L I A ~...,-:..,,,..,. .;x; , ..... , 4 , :?',....nt, V....:_'..'itxt?,''''''.l.,, This is a model of the College of Agricuture's planned Ag Arena. The college will be holding a livestock sale to raise money for the project. Livestock sale to help Ag Arena 50 percent of money raised to be donated to fund drive By DENNIS SNYDER Daily Collegian Staff Writer The College of Agriculture's Ag Arena project will take a giant step toward being more than just a blueprint after some of the money raised at a livestock sale in Harrisburg today is donated to the project's fund drive. The sale may raise as much as $lOO,OOO, said Milford R. Heddleson, coordinator of environmental quality affairs for the college. About $235,000 has been raised for the arena so far from other sources, he added. Together, the money represents over a third of the total estimated construction cost of $900,000. Groups and individuals were asked to donate animals, with the agreement that 50 percent of the animal's sale price will be donated to the project. About 120 dairy cows, 60 beef cattle, 55 to 60 pigs and 35 to 40 sheep were donated, Heddleson said. The sale is being spon sored by the major breeding associations in the state. Samuel H. Smith, dean of the college, said the sale, to be held in the Farm Show Building, allows those who donate animals to be a part of the project. He said donors will be recognized. "The idea is we are publicly thanking individuals for contrib uting, and they are contributing also in an appropriate manner "The Price is Weis" David Weis Fashion Department . Junior and Missey Sportswear 5 DAYS ONLY! WEDNESDAY, DECEMBER 9 TO SUNDAY, DECEMBER 13 Colvin Klein esigner Jeans A Sportswear . 4 Department Benner Pike NI Z Y State College, Pa. OPEN Mon. thru Sat. 10 a.m. to 10 p.m. • • OPEN Mon. thru Sat. 10 a.m. to 10 p.m. Sun. Noon to S p.m ...,... _ 1.444 47' -43 .1, 4 .11 •t. ==Mll ..tr....0...1t.mg . 7 4 '4k; at Discount Prices that one of the Ag Arena's main functions will be for animal showing, judging and display," he said. The arena is planned as a facility capable of hosting student resident instructional activities, such as the annual horticul ture show and various animal shows. Faculty, students and student organizations in the college will have top priority at the arena, but that the arena will be available for a nominal fee to breeding associations, Smith said. Food and plants also were donated for the sale Although the sale will be contributing a major part of funding for the arena, it is not the only monetary source for the arena. Students have played a major role in collecting donations from people in the field of agriculture, including some State College businesses, and organizing agriculture alumni phone-a thons, Smith said. The Agriculture Student Council has contributed $250 and the Horticulture Club has pledged $3,000, Heddleson said. Council President Don Snyder said the council will probably give another $250 this spring. _ The council is sponsoring a phone-a-thon in late January and early February; all proceeds will go toward the project. .Cum Clip and Save 1 J illi t / ,10‘) 5 rci''''Pfs .T tg:1m ° A lv s L c, I OY, .iiihi ;ie i vits) ,,e,s€ o6AlrvEß r ~., / 14;44 1 / 44) , 0 ( . 0N .) VZO . O ' 7 44. - basketware , 411 , vfle y boxes tt o t bedspreads it lb tip r O i rhalYlertts D. SUNSI-11NE220 S. FRASER (across from the pest off ice) THIS COUPON ENTITLES BEARER ..). TO 10% OFF ON ANY PURCHASE OVER $1.0" .., :f• (EXCEPT SALE MERCHANDISE) _, a, sItO -VALID Tillikol)G1-1 DEC Ict'h - =.:7: \ >•• ea imported clothin g jewelry hammoc-ks bamboo blinds Cot ll Clip and Save Slightly Irregulars hile Quantities Last SORRY NO RAINCHECKS `.:'..- - f.,.. :; f5:.1• . ,...:;' , . 't•••••i''..:4:•i.' , ,;::• , , .!!0,4;.:1:;:,..'''" Solidarity - .stands."'s.trong against t-evemment pressure By THOMAS. W. NETTER Associated Press Writer WARSAW, Poland (AP) Solidarity leader. Lech Walesa declared yesterday his independent union "cannot retreat any more" in the face of unrelenting assaults by Poland's Commu nist regime. As he entered a meeting of the union presiditim-in Gdansk on the eve of a session of Solidarity's national leidership commis sion, Walesa told reporters outside a Baltic port shipyard. "We do not want confrontation but we cannot retreat any more. We cannot be passive any longer as this would be detrimental for the union." He said that strikes, not violence, were the union's only weapons. Solidarity's national leadership commission, which meets today in Gdansk, is expected to approve launching a general strike if the government gets and uses "extraordinary" pow- lask a .7 alts WASHINGTON (AP) A special financing package for the $43 billion Alaska natural gas pipeline, described as the world's largest private construction project, was sent to the White House yesterday after supporters swept aside legal and policy objections. The House gave final approval to the measure in a 230-188 vote, a replay of its 233-173 decision Wednesday. President Reagan is expected to sign the bill. The original vole was caught in a legal snarl that opponents Say leaves a cloud over financing arrangements. They say the second vote violated - the special law Congress enacted in 1976 to govern pipeline decisions. Sen. Howard Metzenbaum, D-Ohio, a leading opponent, said he would challenge the package in court, and Rep. Torn Corcoran, R-111., who led House opposition, said he may join the suit. "The banks are certainly not going to put up the money with lawsuits pending," said Rep. Richard Ottinger, D-N.Y., who called the vote "patently illegal." But supporters said the legal arguments against the vote were tenuous. Rep. Phil Sharp, D-Ind., a sponsor of the package, said legal challenges were based on "a tortured interpreta tion of the statute." ... 0 .,!. ~„ i e 4 N . ...... •• ..;7,. ncrdses ma t. y f - 'ot dent -,. i 4 it .. „.., 4 . . , ' By OWEN ULLMANN Associated Press IVritet WASHINGTON ( AP) President Reagan's budget planners hope to whittle the federal deficit down to under $7O billion in 1983 and $4O billion or less in 1984, and are considering tax increases to get there, adminis tration sources said yesterday. The new revenues might come from withholding taxes on interest and dividend income, imported oil fees, taxes on employer-paid health insurance benefits and a windfall profits tax on deregulated natural gas;•admin istration officials said. One source said the administration is looking at plans to` raise $BO billion to $B5 billion in 1983 and 1984, reducing a deficit now projected at a recoid-,breaking level of more than $l5O billion in 1984. That is a significant increase from the $22 billion in new tax increases through 1984 that President Reagan proposed in September. But. Reagan, whose hallmark has been to cut taxes, ~:444a1ps the adminis, itt ::41 Vmost.,,reluctaT i t . _4441'64 *SP! 'Z' - ....p,'• 4 ',.„,5;:.;.•1;!--, J : - ,' edti(' - j . o."*ll,egui 4 ? en" ''''' ,, il - ":•tc'4 l 4llfiliA. proposals under study'bY - Reagan's senior aft_ be assured of winning presidential approval. Officials hope to reduce the 1983 deficit to between $5O billion and $7O billion. This would be accomplished .by seeking $4O billion to $5O billion in new budget cuts and $3O billion or more in new taxes. For 1984, the deficit target is in the range of $35 . billion * I SO billion. It would be.reached by makinganottierSso Billion to $6O billion in cuts and seeking $5O billion or more in new taxes. pipeline Reagan Reagan also has been.reluctant to make significant stand how after what he said. . . how he can serve the .. break the current record Of $66.4 billion set in 1976, but president very well." at least the president would be spared the embarrass- It was also disclosed by sources that widely published ment of presiding over Hie first "triple-digit" deficit, deficit figures prepared a week ago have been revised, aides said.• . :.- • ....-- although they still paint a bleak budget outlook. Reagan has ruled •olitiany dilution of the three-year The sources, who asked that their names not be used, cut in personal tax rates approving by Congress last said budget director David A. Stockman told Reagan summer, though he has` l previously endorsed other that without more budget cuts or tax increases, the revenue-raising proposals, - deficit will surge to $107.5 billion in fiscal 1982, $147.9 Placing a windfall profits tax on natural gas, which billion in 1983 and $152.4 billion in 1984. may be the only way. Congress would agree to accele- The earlier estimates showed deficits of $109.1 billion rate the removal of price controls, would bring in $l2 for the current fiscal year, $152.3 billion for 1983 and $162 billion a year by 198CAccording to administration billion for 1984. Fiscal 1982 began in October. estimates. Although •M•11•F Of his advisers seem to "These (deficit) numbers are so shaky. it's incredi- Support the tax as an :ti nitable price for decontrol, ble," said one source, who noted that the figures do not ' Reagane remains publielykipposed to it. reflect the spending cuts and tax increases Reagan will • Other tax proposals under-consideration include: seek when he send his 198:3 budget plan to Congress late ~ o Withholding 5 percent of an individual's interest next month. .and dividend income, to raise $2 billion a year. Nevertheless, the new deficit estimates created pol it i • Placing as 3 per barrel fee on imported oil, a move cal problems. Reagan's economic advisers suggested .t ~,**,.:.,:,,,,,„,,,. : :.. timated to raise...• - that deficits arc not,necessarilyAnflationary and comer- • . ',.;','-: •i. Either limit ••• ....• ' - '''j'!::: ployers can claim for vative Regal:l4i* 'Congteitif*MifleitalieWtlaW:'ili i ~' , ,,.,: 7 , :., ; 0, : :.:.:•,:7, 1 ;i4nfributing`tir;::;,,%::. ' : ;;: , 3,'1 ;,, insurance premiums the president qt ' •:iihlanelV Magri - Vile •. A :S ar t .. 1..- 1 . rtna ... or treat the con ' 'e l *ltE,•:rlimrt of the employee's promised to do. ..: ....••.•- .... .: r , taxable income, an adtkitt that'would raise $8 billion. At the White House, Reagan met yesterday with a atween Meanwhile, the el - tali - Map — of the Senate Budget Com- group of outside economic advisers, who agreed Reagan dished mittee suggested yesterd•y that William A. Niskanen, is on the right course and "urged him to stick to his cuts one of Reagan's economic advisers, resign for saying basic program," said chief spokesman David A. Ger budget deficits have no:•Connection with inflation or gen. 35 bi interest rates. . • • '•• -:: Although the administration has ruled out any tax alik; ' Sen. Pete V. DOrnegt2•R-N.M., did not demand increases for 1982 because of the current recession, itlir Niskanen's resignation ittilii . the Council of Economic officials are hopeful they can find enough spending cuts • ' Advisers, but he saiallift 4 slAifficult for me to under- to keep the deficit under $lOO billion. _ ..._... ~ • - ,:' , i , . • •••,.',:S4 ~. ers, including a strike ban Solidarity officials in Szczecin, the Baltic port on the East German border, said five policemen began a hunger strike in the Adolf Warski.shipyard to demand a trade union for police. The authorities !lave fought such an idea for months since it was raised by former policemen in Warsaw. Shipyard sources said other police officers would join the protest later by giving moral support bttt not fasting. Poland's army. newspaper, Zolnierz Wolnosci, quoted an unnamed colonel as saying it was time to halt Solidarity's "march to a national catastrophe, the suicidal march to the gallows." The paper called Unionists who paint anti-media graffitti and paste up posters around Poland "snots run berserk." "Solidarity leaders demonstrate constant concern over their packag approval The measure, waiving antitrust and pricing laws, was opposed on consumer grounds. In a concession to the financial dOininunity, the pack age could mean customers will start paying off billions of dollars in construction loans before the pipeline is completed, even if it . is abandoned. But supporters said that is unlikely, and the small risk is worth it to tap the vast natural gas reserves on Alaska's North Slope. Proven re serves total 26 trillion cuhiC' feet about 13 percent of known U.S. supplieg and geologists say another 100 trillion cubic feet may he awaiting discovery. The 4,800-mile pipeline .would run from the Prudhoe Bay fields south Through Alaska, then southeast through Canada to near Calgary, Alber ta. It would fork there, with separate legs running to existing pipeline connections near San Francis co and Chicago. If financing is found, the pipeline could be completed about 1987. The controversial pre-bil ling arrangement would not take effect until then. Without the special financMg arrangements. supporters argued, the pipelin'e will never be built and the gas is inaccessible: Sakharov's daughter-in-law summoned By DAVID MINTHORN Associated Press Writer MOSCOW (AP) Andrei Sakharov's daughter-in-law said yesterday she has been summoned to the Soviet visa office, apparent ly to receive her long-awaited exit papers. But she vowed not to leave for the United States until she is sure the Sakharov has abandoned a hunger strike on her behalf. "I feel happier now. I feel much calmer," Liza Alexeyeva said after receiving the sum mons to appear today at OVIR. where exit visas are issued. "But I still have a lingering fear that it's not quite true and that it might all turn out terribly." The apparent decision to permit her to emigrate seemed to be a major concession by Soviet authorities, who have been under in tense international pressure to meet Sakha rov's demands to let Alexeyeva join her husband in the United States. The Soviet government has not commented officially on the case since last Friday, and repeated attempts by The Associated Press to reach KGB officials for confirmation have been unsuccessful. Alexeyeva, the focus of a bitter struggle between the banished dissident and Soviet authorities, said she was told to bring her passport, two photographs and 210 rubles (about $3OO at the official exchange rate), popularity," the Communist Party paper Trybuna Ludu said. "And this is most easily gained through negation, through a resounding no. "But how much longer can this no continue when more and more people in Poland begin to realize that such posture can only lead to catastrophe," the paper said. Members of Solidarity and the anti-Communist dissident group Confederation of Independent Poland marched with thousands of Poles in southern Katowice yesterday to demand freedom for political prisoners. The Confederation, in a communique telexed to news agen cies, said a "determined, massive offensive" action was the only way to rescue Poland from a "counter-revolutionary" offensive launched by the Communist Party. It said the party had "regained the initiative" and 'alleged bortion bill faces enate oppositi • n By Tl5l PETVIT Associated Press Write! HARRISBURG (AP) Opponents and supporters of a strict abortion bill that the House has sent to the Senate predict a tough fight in the upper chamber and eventually a court suit against the mea sure. Through a parliamentary move, the bill was sent directly to the Senate floor for a vote, but the bill's sponsor, Rep. Stephen Preind, R-Delaware County, said he does not expect a vote until January. The bill is co-sponsored by Rep. Gregg L. Cunningham, R-Centre County. Critics of the bill say the legislation, approved 131-62 by the !louse on Wednes day, would make Pennsylvania the toughest state in the nation in which to get an abortion. There were 65,000 abor tions performed in the state last year. In a late night vote, the Mouse reversed an earlier decision and voted not to allow the voters to decide whether the abortion law should take effect. Senate Majority Leader Robert Jube lirer said the bill would not sit idle for too long because "that allows pressure to build up and lobby the ears off the mem bers." "It faces a tough fight in the Senate," said Howard Fetterhoff, executive direc tor of the Pennsylvania Catholic Confer ence, which endorsed the bill. "The leaders there are not as favorable to it as they were in the House." Morgan Plant, spokeswoman for the Committee for Quality Health Standards, which opposes the bill, said the Senate leaders "aren't favorable toward the way the house sent them such a sensitive which is the normal price for a Soviet exit She told reporters that the summons came in a form letter that arrived at Sakharov's Moscow apartment yesterday evening, short ly after she received word that Sakharov and his wife Yelena Bonner had voluntarily ended the hunger strike they began Nov. 22. The 26-year-old Miss Alexeyeva, however, said she has no intention of leaving the Soviet Union before seeing the Sakharovs. She said the KGB (security police) told her earlier in Nobel winners appeal to Brezhnev STOCKHOLM, Sweden (AP) Nine of this year's 10 Nobel prize winners have sent a cable to Soviet President Leonid I. Brezhnev expressing concern over the fate of Soviet fellow-laureate Andrei Sakharov, the news agency TT said yesterday. In the cable, announced as the prize award ing ceremony opened, the nine appealed to Brezhnev to ease conditions for Sakharov, who was reported hospitalized by Soviet au thorities during a hunger strike aimed at winning permission for his daughter-in-law to leave the Soviet Union. The Daily Collegian Friday, Dec. 11, 111819 that "direct preparations for a confrontation by force are being carried out." The group, one of the chief organizers of the Katowice maucht, said the only way to prevent a confrontation was government agreement to Solidarity demands for a greater role in running Poland. The deputy marshal of Parliament, Piotr Stefanski, told the official PAP news agency that a new law setting strict rules for calling strikes seemed sufficient now. But he said that the Parliament would also consider a special powers act for the government when it was instructed to do so by the party in the form of a formal motion from party deputies. "Once this happens, the Seim (the Polish parliament) will start work on the bill," he said. "I have no doubt suits will be filed immediately (if the bill gains final pas sage) and then we'll fight this battle in the courts,'• Plant said. The hill would make it harder to get an abortion by requiring: e A 24-hour wailing and counseling period before an abortion. 0 A minor female to get one parent's consent for an abortion. o Doctors to use an abortion technique most likely to result in a live birth for well-developed fetuses. A second doctor would have to be present to save the life of the newborn child. e That no abortions be performed in public hospitals and clinics unless the woman's life is endangered or pregnancy results from rape or incest. e That women pay for special health insurance to cover abortion costs, except in instances when the mother's life is endangered. Sylvia Stengle, director of the Allen town Women's Center, said the House vote has made her patients "extremely panicky. Our phones have been ringing off the wall." Stengel said abortion clinics are start ing to inform patients about how their lawmakers voted on abortion legislation. the day that that she could visit them next Monday. Sakharov, winner of the 1975 Nobel Peace Prize for his work on behalf of human rights, was banished to the Volga River city 240 miles east of Moscow nearly two years ago to limit his access to foreigners. The president of the Soviet Academy of Sciences, to which Sakharov still belongs despite his troubles with Soviet authorities, told Alexeyeva the scientist :vas in no danger of dying and had begun drinking fruit juice at a Gorky hospital. To ease the dissident's conditions "would become an important step in restoring normal scientific relations between East and West." the cable read. The cable was signed by economy winner James Tobin, literature winner Elias Canetti. physics winners Kai Sieghahn, Nicolaas Bloembergen and Arthur Schawlow, chemis try winners Roald Hoffman and Kenichi Fu kui and by Torsten Wiesel and David Hubei, two of the three medicine prize winners. There was no explanation why the third Roger W. Sperry did not sign the appeal. issue. The I louse amended the abortion legis lation into a Senate-passed hill. Thus, upon passage, it bypassed the Senate committee system and went right to the Senate floor, where legislative rules will block the senators from changing the legislation.