6—The Daily Collegian Monday, Dec. 14,1981 Solidarity's referendum call was the last straw Editor’s Note: The writer reported from Poland during the early phases of the crisis there and since has. followed developments there from Bonn. By ROBERT H. REID Associated Press Writer BONN, West Germany (AP) Solidarity’s call for a referendum on the Communist system was probably the last straw for Polish authorities, prompting them to declare martial law and clamp down on the independent union. The union’s 107-member country commission adopted a resolution Saturday calling for a “vote of confidence” on the national leadership by Feb. 15 and free, democratic elections to parliament by mid-1982. Western observers here said they thought that if such elections were held the Communist lead ership would have been swept from power, endan gering the security system of “satellite states” which the Soviet Union established in Eastern Europe after World War 11. Soviets report Polish statements MOSCOW (AP) Tass reported yesterday that Premier ,Gen. Wojciech Jaruzelski had declared martial law in Poland and established a “military council” to run the country., Radio Moscow said the action was taken in response to the “anarchy facing the country” and because of “extremist actions of Solidarity leaders who are trying to take over the country.” Tass initially carried a one-sentence announcement from Warsaw shortly after 9 a.m. Moscow time yesterday on the declaration of martial law. The Soviet news agency carried an expanded account of the situation 90 minutes later. The Radio Moscow broadcast said, “A decision had been adopted to intern the extremist leaders of Solidarity and also members of illegal anti-socialist organizations. “A group of persons responsible for the public, political and economic crisis in Poland has also been interned. Among them are (former Communist Party leader) Edward Gierek, (for mer Premier) Piotr Jaroszewicz, (former party member) Adislaw Grudzien, (former Politburo member) Jan Szydlak and others,” Radio Moscow said in the English-language broadcast. Radio Moscow said a “state of emergency” was declared in Haig conferring situation with BRUSSELS, Belgium (AP) Sec retary of State Alexander M. Haig Jr. delayed his trip to Israel yester day because of developments in Po land, and has been conferring on the situation with U.S. and NATO offi cials, his spokesman said. “Secretary of State Haig has de cided to remain in Brussels-for the time being,” State Department spokesman Dean Fischer said. Fischer said Haig has been in touch with officials in Washington, including Vice President George Bush, Deputy Secretary of State William Clark and Defense Secre tary Caspar Weinberger. “In addition, he is sending a per sonal message to all NATO foreign ministers,” Fischer said. Andrei Sakharov’s daughter-in-law, Liza Alexeyeva, receives attention from an American TV crew when she arrived at the Soviet visa agency office in Moscow Friday to get an exit visa. She was told she would receive a Soviet passport to go to the United States and could go to Gorky to see Sakharov and his wife. Reapportionment may be enacted By CARL MANNING Associated Press Writer HARRISBURG (AP) After nearly four months of haggling and planning, Pennsylvania senators this week hope to enact a reapportionment plan eliminating two of the state’s 25 congressional districts. It has not been an easy task, with congressmen crying the blues over virtually every plan suggested, and state lawmakers inundated with ideas each touted as the best way to carve up the state’s congressional districts. “Everybody has a vested interest in it. You can’t please some, no matter what you do,” said one person who has worked on the plan since August. What the final plan will be is anyone’s guess. The House has a plan that is expected to pass that chamber, while the Senate has a version of its own. Since the plans differ, the matter may be resolved in a joint conference committee. Senate Republican leader Robert Jubelirer said the reapportionment plan would have bipartisan support, Throughout the crisis the government has warned Solidarity that it should not become a political alternative to the Communist Party. In its 1980 agreement with the government, Solidari ty officially recognized the party’s leadership role in Poland. Membership in the Communist Party has rare ly exceeded 2.5 million in the largely Roman Catholic nation of 36 million, observers here say, and the current social crisis has discredited the party further in the eyes of the people. Within hours after the resolutions were ap proved, the Communist Party leader and pre mier, Gen. Wojciech Jaruzelski, announced that an army committee had taken power, suspending civil rights for what he called the good of the nation. An undetermined number of Solidarity activ ists, as well as officials of discredited previous Communist regimes, were arrested, he said. Jaruzelski’s decree unprecedented in the Soviet bloc during peacetime came five days before a rumored Warsaw Pact summit confer- on Polish officials He declined to reveal the contents of the message being sent to the other NATO foreign ministers. But there was speculation the ministers could be called into an emergency session because of developments in Poland. Fischer said the State Department in Washington has contacted the Polish ambassador there, “seeking clarification of government actions and purposes.” “We are, here as in Washington, watching the situation closely,” he said. “As you know, communica tions with Warsaw are difficult and information incomplete. Our contin uing task is to obtain clarification of the situation.” indicating the upper chamber will pass a plan this week. Last week, state Sen. Frank O’Connell, R-Luzerne County, circulated a plan that is expected to be the one the Senate adopts, possibly with some modifications. The main feature of the latest plan is that it splits just 14 counties, while all the other plans split as many as 30. Under O’Connell’s latest plan, Democrats Austin Murphy of Washington County and Donald Bailey of Westmoreland would be in the same district, while Democrat Joseph Gaydos of Pittsburgh would not have incumbent opposition. In Philadelphia, Democrat Joseph Smith’s district would be eliminated, which was really never an issue. He was elected in July to serve the remaining term of Raymond Lederer, knowing the district probably would be cut. For O’Connell, the process of formulating the plan has been an endless series of complaints, late-night hours and trial-and-error to get the right combinations of numbers. Poland as of midnight Saturday, and that military commissars had been appointed in all districts to rule the country. Jaruzelski announced creation of a Military Council of National Salvation “to unite all the patriotic forces of the people in the name of saving Poland,” the report said. The Polish Communist Party chief appealed for public order. He also asked for restored trust in and respect for the state bodies of government. In his speech, Jaruzelski appealed “to unite the ranks of the party, the leading force in society, which is consistently coming out to consolidate and further build socialism in the Polish Peoples Republic,” Moscow Radio said. The premier “stressed that the Polish people highly value the friendship with the Soviet Union and other countries of the socialist community and their fraternal assistance.” “Poland will remain an indispensable link in the socialist community,” Radio Moscow quoted Jaruzelski as saying. In East Berlin, East Germany’s official news agency report ed the “state of emergency” in' neighboring Poland. It said action had been taken to combat the “activities of criminals against the people.” The ADN agency quoted Jaruzelski as saying, “The hands of the adventurers must be bound.” ence in Moscow, at which the chronic Polish crisis was expected to be a major topic. The official Soviet news agency Tass charged twice last week that “counter-revolutionaries” in the union were “prepared for a direct seizure of power” in Poland. In the weeks leading up to the decree, radicals in Solidarity outmaneuvered union moderates such as chief Lech Walesa, whose position was underminded by the government’s unwillingness to meet union demands for economic and political reform. Meanwhile, the effects of the economic crisis including long lines for food, fuel and clothing built up tensions among Poland’s 36 million peo ple. Soviet interference would be 'serious ' By ROBERT B. CULLEN Associated Press Writer WASHINGTON (AP) President Reagan said yes terday the United States has made it clear to Moscow “how seriously we would view any interference in Poland” by the Soviet Union. Reagan made the comment alter U.S. officials sum moned Soviet and Polish diplomats to the State Depart ment yesterday in the wake of the Polish communist government’s crackdown on the Solidarity labor movement. “Everyone views it seriously,” Reagan said upon returning to the White House from Camp David. “We’re monitoring the situation. Beyond that I can’t have any comment.” The president refused to answer questions from reporters about possible U.S. action in the wake of the crackdown on Solidarity. Nor would he say what mes sage he would send to the people of Poland. Reagan, clad in a blue windbreaker and faded blue jeans, and carrying a thin briefcase, returned to Wash ington yesterday after spending the weekend at the presidential retreat in .Maryland, where he was kept abreast of the events in Poland. He was met by White House Chief of Staff James A, AP Laserphoto analysis TV. Polish pilgrims display this banner in Polish in the crowd at St. Peter’s square, Vatican City. Pope John Paul II told them to pray for peace in their country, saying “no more Polish blood can be shed, because too much has already been spilled.” The banner says: “Parishoners from Bialski Homage to the Holy Father.” Sakharov and wife recovering MOSCOW (AP) Soviet dissident Andrei Sakharov and his wife appeared weak and shrunken after a 17-day hunger strike in their Gorky exile, but they have eagerly started on the road to recovery, their daughter-in-law said yesterday. “They looked very weak and very pale,” said the daughter-in-law, Liza Alexeyeva, who returned to Mos cow yesterday morning after visiting the Nobel laureate and his wife, Yelena Bonner, in their hospital suite in Gorky. , Alexeyeva, 26, provided foreign reporters with fresh details of the strike, which ended last Wednesday after Soviet authorities said she would be allowed to emigrate to the United States. Added to that were three public hearings the first time such hearings have been conducted for a reappor tionment plan, he said. “Nobody likes change, especially elected officials comfortable in their districts,” O’Connell said. For example, O’Connell said that Democrat Alan Ertel complained about several plans until he was assured he would not be put into a district with an incumbent. “I’ve never seen anything so political in my career,” O’Connell said. The senator said the main problem is that the only thing the courts care about is whether each district represents an equal number of people within a one-half percent deviation. His latest plan accomplishes that. The biggest district would have 518,240 constituents and the smallest would' have 514,322 with the median at 515,944. The new districts will have to be enacted by Feb. 16 or all 23 seats will be decided in statewide elections. As a result, hardliners such as Jan Rulewski and Marian Jurczyk used the meeting of Solidari ty’s national leadership to present demands for free parliamentary elections and an end to the “leading role” of the Communist Party. The union also endorsed a call by the militant Warsaw chapter for a national day of protest next Thursday despite appeals by the government against the plan. The union planned to protest “the use of force or threat of force” by authorities against its members. At the same time, the union’s growing militancy apparently played into the hands of hardliners in the Communist Party, such as Politburo member Stefan Olszowski and former Politburo member Tadeusz Grabski. Olszowski, a former foreign minister, was be lieved by Western observers to have been behind a recent press attack against Solidarity and Walesa. The press campaign reached a climax last Monday when the state radio broadcast tape recordings of a union meeting in Radom in which Baker 111 and Michael K. Deaver, the deputy chief of staff, as he stepped out of a Marine Corps helicopter on the White House south lawn. “Several times, along with the whole free world, we’ve made it plain how seriously we would view any interference with them (the Poles),” Reagan said. Apparently referring to diplomatic exchanges before yesterday’s events in Poland, he said messages have 'Several times, along with the whole free world, we've made it plain how seriously we would view any interference with them (the Poles).' been sent “by, I think, almost all the free world several times” to the Soviet Union. White House officials said Reagan had no formal meetings on the Polish situation yesterday. “The president will continue to be kept abreast of news briefs Majority approves of first lady NEW YORK (AP) - A majority of Americans approve of Nancy Rea gan as first lady, but an even higher percentage think she is overempha sizing style during hard economic times, according to a poll released yesterday. Two-thirds of those responding to a poll commissioned by Newsweek magazine said Reagan is too style conscious and is less sympathetic to the problems of the poor than other recent first ladies. But 57 percent said they approved of the way she handles her duties as the president’s wife. And, in an interview with News- Rental Santa recalls memories TOLEDO, Ohio (AP) - When Glenn Bowland started hiring out his services as a rental Santa Claus a decade ago, it was for the sentiment, not the money. The 300-pound former trucker wanted to bring the same joy to youths that he experienced as a child. He did not count on being fondled by middle-aged ' women while wearing his scarlet costume. Some ho, ho, ho. But then, other rental Santas have the same kind of holiday war stories, like the one about an elderly grand mother who asked one young Santa for a new husband. Such is the stuff yuletide employ ment is made of. “When I first got started, it was because when I was a little kid, Santa Claus used to come to my the radio claimed Walesa was heard to say, “Confrontation is inevitable and confrontation will take place.” Walesa said his comments at the meeting were taken out of context by the state radio. The drastic step to martial law came only a few weeks after hopeful signs that the union and the government would be able to negotiate a formula for working together for the economic good of the country. On Nov. 4, Walesa, Jaruzelski and Cardinal Jozef Glemp, the Roman Catholic primate in Poland, held an unprecedented meeting to estab lish a framework for cooperation. Following the session, Cardinal Glemp flew to Rome for talks with Polish-born Pope John Paul 11. The Polish primate told reporters at the time that he was more optimistic about prospects for overcoming, the crisis. Two weeks later, representatives of the union and government began negotiations in Warsaw on establishing some sort of framework for cooper ation. developments as necessary,” said spokesman Mort Allin. Defense Secretary Casper Weinberger, arriving back in Washington about the same time, said he was “moving right now to briefings and meetings on the subject.” “I think anybody has to be concerned about any change in a situation like that,” Weinberger said. “But —President Ronald Reagan we don’t really have enough facts to make any kind of assessment or judgment at this time.” , Twenty minutes after Reagan returned to the White House, members of the National Security Council con ferred without him on the Polish situation. week, President Reagan called his wife “a warm, generous, vulnerable person” who has been hurt by “false image building” and “unjust crit icism.” “I have to laugh sometimes about the attention to her wardrobe,” the president said. “I tease her about never throwing anything away. I’ve teased her that she’s still got her middy blouses from gym class. “There’s been an awful (lot) of false image building that has. gone on around her,” he said. “You’d find she is very much loved by all' the women who know her.” . . house and I loved it,” said Bowland, 56, who is portly enough at 5-foot-7 to skip the pillow for his stomach. “I went out and paid $2OO for the suit and I paid for it the first Christmas. It was amazing. t People still want Santa Claus around, as bad as things are,” Bowland said recently. At $l5 a visit, Bowland, who is retired from trucking, is not getting rich. But if a family cannot afford to pay for his services, well, Bowland said he will work it out. “Hey, but I won’t go just any where. No big parties. No adult parties. And no visits at l a.m. I think that is a pretty dumb time to visit kids, but people have asked for it,” he said. He’s learned some lessons. V: 1 m AP Laserphoto collegian notes • Eco-Action will sponsor an information table • The Horticulture Club’s Christmas food drive with petitions from 9:30 a.m to 5 p.m. today in the will continue today and tomorrow. Donations of any HUB basement to promote public awareness of a canned goods can be dropped off at 103 Tyson. All potential cutoff of funding to the United Nations food will be donated to needy families of Centre Environment Program. County. • The Society of Women Engineers will hold a ,' • The local chapter of the National Student high school program committee meeting at 6:15 Speech Language and Hearing Association will hold tonight in the Kunkle activities lounge of Hammond a meeting at 7 tonight in 320 HUB. Building. - • Free University will meet at 5:30 this af ternoon in 223 HUB. • The philosophy department will hold a club meeting at 7:30 tonight at 125 E. Fairmount Ave., • The Executive Energy Conservation Commit apartment C. Nomination of officers, structure of tee is interested in conducting a survey on student club and philosophical ideas will be discussed. attitudes and knowledge on energy issues. For more information, contact M. Rashid Dhan at 865-2291. • The Juggling Club will hold a meeting and practice at 8:30 tonight in 106 White Building. © The Conversant Programis looking for people interested in meeting with international students • The Kung-Fu Club will hold a workout between for a couple of hours a week. Volunteers may stop 6:30 and 9:30 tonight in 133 White Building. , by 305 Sparks, from 9 a.m. to 5 p.m. or call 863-1604. T.V., Stereo Broken Down? Our Service is Exceptional! EXCEPTIONALLY * Competent * Fast * Economical We service all brands, all types of electronic equipment ' T& R ELECTRONICS 225 S. Allen St., State College (next to Centre Hardware) 238-3800 In search of DIANE, a Penn St. SENIOR from LANCASTER, PA. ■ majoring in HISTORY If you remember Sat. Nov. 21 at FRANCESCO'S in Scranton dancing to the oldies DOUG from LANCASTER, OHIO would like very much to contact you. PLEASE call collect; in the a.m. to 614-653-7781 or anytime at 614- 653-3394 Check this Value List before you fill your Christmas List! • Penn State Hooded Sweatshirts - $13.95 • Penn State Football Jerseys $6.95 (#’s. 1,14,25,44,62,82) • Penn State Warmup Suits $19.95 • Special Selection Penn State T-shirts $2.95 • Selected Shorts/Jerseys Reduced 40%-50% • Cross Pens 50% OFF Remaining Inventory Greek Jewelry and custom decorated sportswear for everyone on your Christmas list. ... • PSUBAMS will meet from 7 to 9 tonight in 22 Deike. “Career Night Part 2” will be the topic of discussion. “Gift Headquarters” HOUSE OF KASHMIR Gifts from All Over the World! ★ China ★ Beautiful Jewelry ★ Decorative Boxes ★ Water Beds ★ Brass Items ★ Backgammon Sets At Low, Low Prices! Heavy Wool Sweaters $66 Now $39.99 Alpaca Sweaters $76 Now $43.95 only at HOUSE OF KASHMIR 10-8:30 PM 130 Calder Way Open Sun. 12-5 PM (Pugh St. Parking Garage) 234-4403 Olympics to be discussed Problems with and the future of the Olympic games will be dis cussed tonight at a Colloquy-spon sored program. The panel discussion will be held at 8 tonight in the HUB. main lounge. Members of the panel will in clude: John A. Lucas, an Olympic historian; Ronald A. Smith, Uni versity sports historian; Marshal Avener, University women’s assis tant gymnastics coach; and Ellen L. Perry, 1976 University women’s swim team coach and a member of the U.S. Women’s Olympic Com mittee. —by Brian E. Bowers police log • Charles Smith, 236 S. Fraser St., told the State Association on Dec. 4. College Police Department on Saturday that 35 The flags are identified as being the flags of record albums were missing from his home. Mexico, Switzerland and Uganda, police said. The albums are valued at about $350, police said. The flags are valued at about $330, police said. • Stan Figart, Centre Hall, told State College police Saturday that tools, a pair of gloves and a pair of jogging shoes were missing from his pick-up truck which was parked at the Penn State Sheraton, 240 S. Pugh St. The tools, gloves and shoes are valued at about $146, police said. • Employees at Roy Rogers Restaurant, 310 E. College Ave., told State College police that a mili tary-type smoke bomb was set off inside the restua- rant about 2:35 a.m. on Saturday. Some food was damaged, but losses have not been estimated, police said. • William F. Fuller, manager of Associated Student Activities, told University Police Services on Friday that three international flags were miss ing from a dance held by the International Student The Daily Collegian Monday, Dec. 14, 1981—7 • James F. Lynch, assistant director of interna tional student affairs, told University police Satur day that two international flags were missing from the lobby of Kern Building. The flags are valued at about $220, police said. • University police said that a 10-foot tree was missing on Friday from the Blue Golf Course, west of Corl Street. The value of the tree is about $3OO, police said. • Guy Michel, 902 Pinchot, told University police Saturday that two speakers and a test light were missing from his car while it was parked in Parking Lot Orange B near Stuart Hall. The speakers and the light are valued at about $B4, police said. —by Francine Kaufman