The daily collegian. (University Park, Pa.) 1940-current, January 10, 1983, Image 4

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    state/nation/world
Mubarak wants peace this year
By ROBERT H. REID
and STEVEN K. HINDY
Associated Press Writers
CAIRO, Egypt President Hosni
Mubarak said yesterday he hopes
the Arabs make peace with Israel
based on President Reagan's for
mula sometime this year, before the
U.S. presidential campaign compli
cates the negotiating process.
Hosni Mubarak
In an interview with The Asso
ciated Press, he urged Jordanian
King Hussein and Palestine Liber
ation Organization leader Yasser
Hire me!
Mark Heckman, 22, poses for a double bill
board in Grand Rapids, Mich. Heckman, who
works for a drug company, wants to earn his
living as an illustrator so he convinced an
advertising 'agency to give him free space.
Except for the torso, the painting is a self
portrait.
Horror movie made through classified section
By DENNIS GEORGATOS
Associated Press Writer
SAN DIEGO A psychiatrist cast in the
unfamiliar role of horror movie producer
wanted some advice on what scares young
people, so he went straight to the source
with newspaper ads asking for help.
The result is the movie "One Dark Night," a
film . about a "school wimp" who takes a dare
to spend the night in a mausoleuffi and ends up
being kept company by living corpses with
glittering eyes and coffins popping out of
walls.
About 100 young people between the ages of
12 and 25 responded to the ads in San Diego
newspapers last September and helped in the
film's production by offering their comments,
criticisms and suggestions throughout the
moviemaking process.
"Basically, this is their film," said psychia
trist Thomas P. Johnson, executive producer
Police raids:
By STEVEN R. HURST
Associated Press Writer
MOSCOW Police and Commu
nist Pariy officials have started
raiding bars, barber shops, restau
rants and stores, searching for
people who slip away from their
jobs during working hours, Soviet
sources said.
The raids apparently are part of
new party chief Yuri V. Andropov's
campaign to strengthen the ailing
Soviet economy by improving
worker productivity.
State newspapers acknowledge
the high absenteeism. But they say
one reason for it is that workers are
forced to go shopping during office
hours if they want to obtain nec
essary but scarce consumer goods
and services.
One Soviet source reported see-
Arafat to quickly "negotiate and
come to conclusions" on the plan
Reagan proposed last Sept. 1. It
calls for Palestinian self-rule in
association with Jordan for the Is
raeli occupied territories of the
West Bank of the Jordan River and
Gaza Strip.
"The Israelis are building at a
very quick tempo so many set
tlements in the West Bank and
Gaza," Mubarak said in an office at
the Uruba palace.
"If we are going to lose another
year with just delivering
statements without any activity so
as to put the Reagan initiative into
action, it will be a big loss and the
problem will be more difficult to
solve."
The Israelis oppose the Reagan
plan, saying it would lead to a
hostile Palestinian state and threat
en Israeli security. They also reject
a portion of the plan calling for an
immediate freeze on Jewish set
tlements in the territories Israel
captured in the 1967 Middle East
War.
Most Arab states reject the plan
because it calls for a Palestinian
association with Jordan rather than
an independent state. Egypt, the
vt:A. 4+le4'
#,t.., • •
and senior consultant with Comworld, the
Orem, Utah-based studio that bankrolled the
$865,000 venture.
Johnson said he solicited their thoughts
because "I wanted their feedback, with the
potential advantage being that we would be in
closer touch with the grassroots ticket buyer.
"Some people feel that people in Hollywood
start making movies for each other and lose
touch with the public and what the non-Holly
wood people would like to see on the screen,"
he said.
Having the young people help select the
script, make plot changes and vote on ver
sions they liked best had never been tried
before on such a large scale, Johnson said,
and the experience to the participants was
likely a positive one.
"They are at a very critical stage of devel
opment," Johnson said. "Many of them feel
that this is an adults' world and adults don't
listen and this was a chance for them to find
Soviets bring workers back to work from bars, stores, barber shops
ing a squad of uniformed police
enter a bar near his apartment
recently and demand the docu
ments of all the patrons.
If a drinker's papers showed he
should be at work, he was ordered
out of the bar and told to go back to
his job. His name was taken down
and a letter was sent to his superior
at work explaining the person was
found drinking on state time.
Other Soviet sources report simi
lar raids by district Communist
Party workers on barber shops,
restaurants, stores and service es
tablishments in Moscow, Lenin
grad, Kiev and far-flung cities in
the provinces.
Soviet television's main evening
news program sent a camera crew
and a reporter to the gates of a
Moscow factory last week to inter
view workers leaving during their
only Arab nation with relations with
Israel, supports the plan as an out
line subject to negotiation.
Mubarak said "it will be very
difficult for Reagan to implement
his initiative" once the ,campaign
for the 1984 U.S. presidential elec
tion begins.
"So I am urging those who are
looking for a comprehensive set
tlement, those who want peace in
this area, the factions concerned, to
make the best use of this specific
period of time so as to negotiate and
to come to conclusions maximum
within six months or one year," he
said.
Hussein and Arafat met yester
day in the Jordanian capital, Am
man, to discuss a formula for joint
Jordanian-PLO representation in
possible peace talks with the Israe
lis. Details of their discussions were
not disclosed.
Hussein met with Reagan in
Washington last month but returned
home without committing himself
to Reagan's plan. Arafat's PLO has
steadfastly rejected the plan, say
ing it fails to provide for Palestinian
statehood.
"I am asking King. Hussein with
the cooperation of Yasser Arafat to
105t. , 1,r , 77W1NT7r7:777'77.7
' ' 4 : '
shifts. One man was asked where
he was going while he should be at
work and responded "to visit a
friend."
In his first major speech after
succeeding the late President Leo
nid I. Brezhnev as party leader,
Andropov vowed to reduce waste
and corruption in the sprawling
country.
"Apparently the strength of iner
tia and adherence to old ways are
still at work. Moreover, some peo
ple, perhaps, just do not know how
to set about doing the job," Andro
pov said Nov. 22. '
His crackdown on absenteeism
has been joined by a simultaneous
press campaign urging shops to
give better service and to rear
range their hours to make it easier
for workers to run errands after
work hours.
finish the negotiations . . . so as to
start the, negotiations for a compre
hensive settlement of the (Middle
East) problem," Mubarak said. •
During the interview, 'Mubarak
reaffirmed his commitment to
peace with Israel despite its June 6
invasion of Lebanon to rout the
PLO, the Israeli annexation of Arab
east Jerusalem and Israeli refusal
to grant autonomy to the 1.3 million
Palestinians living on the West
Bank and Gaza.
"Peace, a comprehensive peace
in this area, is very important,"
Mubarak said. "Not only to the
Arabs alone but also to the Israelis
than being in this situation, no war,
no peace."
Asked whether he believed Israeli
Prime Minister Menachem Begin
shared his commitment to peace,
Mubarak replied: "I'm waiting to
see what are the acts. The negotia
tions (about the Reagan plan) will
prove whether Begin wants peace
or doesn't want peace."
Mubarak said he and• Reagan
would discuss ways to resume Mid
dle East peace talks when he visits
Washington on Jan. 26, and said
Egyptian-American relations were
very good.
themselves in a position like (producer-direc
tor Steven) Spielberg they got to call the
shots."
The movie was shot in Hollywood, and was
produced by Michael Schroeder and directed
by Tom McLoughlin. McLoughlin co-wrote the
script with Michael Hawes.
It opened last week at 300 theaters in Los
Angeles, San Diego and other Western cities.
"I liked it, but I expected it to be more
scary," said Julie Phillip, 22, a student at
Mesa College who contributed suggestions to
the movie. -
"I would recommend it to my friends. It has
good suspense," she said after seeing the
finished product Friday. "It's pretty creative.
And it was nice to be part of the moviemaking
process, even if it was a small part."
Bobby Straker, 16, a La Jolla High School
student who answered the ads "because I like
movies," said some of his ghoulish concepts
about decaying corpses were made into reali-
Izvestia, the government news
paper, complained in an article
Saturday night that in the republic
of Turkmenia, the amount of pro
duction lost from workers running
errands on state time was mon
umental.
"In the past half year alone in
dustrial enterprises in the republic
have lost 35,770 man-days because
of absence from work with the
permission of the administration of
the enterprise," the newspaper
said.
It quoted textile worker L. Sotni
kova as saying services were so
bad in Ashkabad, the Turkmenian
capital, that she could not get a
haircut "because the beauty parlor
is only open until 7 p.m. and when
you go there after work there is
always a big long line."
Workers in Moscow complain of
Rama Rao inaugurated
after defeating Gandhi
NEW DELHI, India (AP) ical group last spring, he turned
Nandamuri Taraka Rama Rao, a his National Art Theater Studio in
film star whose 9-month-old politi- Hyderabad into the party head
cal group beat Prime Minister quarters. •
Indira. Gandhi's party in last
Rama Rao's government is the
week's regional elections, was
first in Andhra Pradesh not con
sworn in yesterday as chief min
trolled by Gandhi's Congress Par
ister of Andhra Pradesh state.
ty. His party won 201 seats in the
More than 100,000 people packed 294-member legislature. Gandhi's
Fateh Stadium to see the ceremo- party won only 60 seats.
ny in Hyderabad, the southern
Andhra Pradesh is a large state
state's capital. One person was
of nearly 55 million people. Most of
killed and another seriously tin
jured when thousands of people them speak the Telegu dialect.
who could not get in stampeded "The Telegu people have cre
outside the stadium. Riot police ated history and demonstrated
used metal-tipped bamboo staves that they will not tolerate misrule,
to push back the surging crowds. corruption and highhandedness,"
After the inauguration, Rama
the 59-year-old actor said in . his
inauguration address.
Rao toured a section of the city
scarred by several days of Mos= Indian newspapers have blamed
lem-Hindu rioting. Police reported Gandhi's defeats in Andhra Pra
two people were stabbed to death desh and Karnataka, another
yesterday in the latest spate of southern Indian stronghold of the
religious feuding. Congress party, on what they call
Rama Rao, whose film role was the corruption, incompetence and
usually a Hindu god, has acted in arrogance of elected officials.
about 300 movies since his first Rama Rao pledged to provide a
film, "Mana Desam" (My Na- "clean administration." He an
tion), was released in 1947. When nounced that students in ,pUblic
he formed his Telegu Desam polit- schools would get free lunch.
ty. He said the movie is "100 percent better"
because of the input from young people.
The moviemakers didn't use all the sugges
tions. While the young people came up with
some pretty macabre situations, Johnson said
he was surprised that the consensus was for a
non-violent ending which the studio vetoed.
"It just goes to show you that young people
don't need to see a chainsaw hacking someone
up or violent scenes with a lot of blood in a
movie thriller," he said.
The young people who participated in the
novel arrangement were not compensated for
their time, nor did they receive any screen
credits. "I wish we could have done something
about that, but we had to follow traditional
Hollywood protocol," Johnson said.
For Philip, this was just a brief fling with
Hollywood.
"I'm going to a a nurse," she said. "I may
be doctoring gory bodies,. but I'm not going to
be shooting them in a movie."
similar problems. With most all
consumer goods in chronic short
supply, they have developed a pri
vate system for alerting friends
when desirable items go on sale.
When the news reaches a work
place, one person is designated the
shopper and rushes out with orders
from his colleagues. Bosses look
the other way, understanding that
there is no other way to obtain
needed goods.
Moskovskaya Pravda, the organ
of the capital's Communist Party
organization, said yesterday it had
sent a team of investigative report
ers to the seven-story "house of
services" on Moscow's northwest
side long billed as a consumer's
paradise.
The paper said the team found
that most stores could not provide
services advertised.
The Daily Collegian
: • ''' ' • • ;
Fla. man finds
a 'hot piece'
waiting in bed
FORT WALTON BEACH, Fla.
(AP) When a big hunk of metal
crashed through the roof and into
his bed, Bill Peebles thought he
might have his very own souvenir
from a falling Soviet satellite.
An investigation, however, es
tablished that the unidentified fly
ing object had not comp from a
Sputnik or even from a fighter at
nearby Eglin Air Force Base, but
from a Chevy Camaro six doors
down the street.
Richard Hammerschmidt, an
18-year-old high school graduate,
said he was preparing to take his
just-tuned red car for a test drive
Friday when the motor "just blew
in a heartbeat."
"I pushed or revved a couple of
times," Hammerschmidt said. "It
exploded. Went through the hood."
'Launched into the air was a 6-
by-8-inch chunk of alloy weighing 5
to 10 pounds. It had been part of
the car's flywheel.
More than 250 yards away, the
rocketing fragment smashed a 6-
inch hole in Peebles' shingle roof.
Peebles, who was out to dinner,
said the first thing he noticed after
returning home was a piece of
ceiling tile on the bedroom floor.
Then he found the metal, still
warm, lying on the bed.
Peebles said he thought it was a
piece from a Soviet military satel
lite that scientists say is falling to
Earth. Then he saw an American
style serial number and thought it
had come from a plane.
Eglin security officers went to
the house and checked the hunk
and said it didn't come from a
military plane, police officer Skip
Gatwood said.
But on Saturday morning, Ham
merschmidt telephoned pOlice.
"My mother had seen the news
paper and she told me what had
happened," he said.
Monday, Tan. 10
. f ~ ri.. ,
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Laserphoto
state news briefs
Couple found dead near Harrisburg
HARRISBURG (AP) —An el- about their necks, he said.
derly couple was found bound with , Lewis said relatives had con
rope and killed in the basement of tatted police after being unable to
their home and had been dead for reach the Bollingers. Police met
as long as three days, police said. with relatives at the house Friday
Clark M. Bollinger, 75, and his night but could find nothing amiss,
wife, Beatrice, 74, were pro- Lewis said, and at the time had no
nounced dead by Craig Waters, reason to believe anything unusual
deputy coroner for Dauphin Coun- had happened.
ty.
Dauphin County District Attor-
But relatives called police back
ney Richard Lewis said the bodies to the house Saturday and the
were found Saturday lying face- search was conducted.
down on the dirt floor in an unfi- Waters said that strangulation
nished extension of the main base- from the ropes was considered as
ment of th ei r home in a possible cause of death. He and
Susquehanna Township. Their Lewis said the couple appeared to
hands were tied behind their backs have been dead for two or three
with rope, which also was wound days.
Centralia fire keeps threatening road
CENTRALIA, Columbia County after a 10-foot crack appeared
(AP) State officials kept the. Wednesday in the road above the
main highway open south of town fire.
yesterday, but continued round- Department personnel stayed at
the-clock monitoring of an under- the highway yesterday to monitor
ground mine fire that has threat- the progress of the fire, which also
ened the road and a natural gas threatens a 6-inch natural gas
pipeline. pipeline, Comey said.
The state Transportation De- The fire has raised tempera
partment posted 200 detour signs tures to 770 degrees about 20 feet
along the highway "strictly as a below the surface, causing a mine
precaution," John Comey of the subsidence, which occurs when
Pennsylvania Emergency Man- the ground settles into under
agement Agency said. ground openings left by aban-
The Transportation Department doned mining operations or
prepared to close the highway crumbling coal, officials said.
nation news briefs
N.J. gasoline tanks continue to burn
NEWARK, N.J. (AP) The ark Fire Director John Caufield
sides of huge gasoline storage said. "If it would only burn more
tanks that have been burning for intensely, we'd be happy."
three days were cool enough yes- Caufield said investigators were
terday for firefighters to touch, studying tank valves, burn -pat
but some pockets of fuel inside one terns on nearby bushes and the
of the three caved-in tanks contin- crumpled rubble, along with inter
ued to burn. viewing witnesses and others who
Firefighters were waiting for know about the 84-acrd facility,
the blaze to burn itself out before about five miles west of New York
beginning a detailed investigation City.
into the cause of Friday's explo- The blast at the Texaco USA
sion, which was felt as far as 130 terminal at Port Newark at 12:15
miles away. Charcoal-gray smoke a.m. Friday killed one man, in
continued to billow into the sky. jured 23 people and destroyed or
"(The fire) is not getting all the damaged nearby railroad cars
oxygen we'd like it to get," New- and buildings.
Bayous recapture smugglers' hearts
NEW ORLEANS (AP) The marijuana and cocaine brought
bayous of southern Louisiana, a into the United States.
smugglers' haven since pirate Louisiana has hundreds of miles
times, have become a favorite of desolate Gulf marshland and
operating ground for drug import- dozens of coastal airports. More
ers chased out of Florida by a than 150 years ago, the pirate king
small army of narcotics agents, Jean Lafitte operated freely from
police said. a series of bases along the coast.
"Louisiana is a hot spot for Later, the area was a center for
drugs right now," said Robert rumrunners defying Prohibition.
Bryden, a special agent for the Police say today's smugglers
federal Drug Enforcement Admin- operate almost as easily.
istration. Bryden said he wouldn't be sur-
Bryden said the amount of marl- prised to find that 20 planeloads of
juana seized by agents working marijuana are flown into Louisia
out of his office in New Orleans na each night. He wouldn't even
has doubled between 1980 and 1982, guess at the number of shrimp
while cocaine seizures have in- boats and freighters plying the
creased sevenfold. bayous with illicit cargoes.
He and other law enforcement Narcotics agents agree they
officials say smugglers are seek- probably seize only one of every 10
ing new operating areas after a drug shipments at best, and the
series of major busts in Florida, amount seized in Louisiana has
which' was receiving most of the burgeoned.
Nixon celebrates birthday quietly
SADDLE RIVER, N.J. (AP)
Former President Richard Nixon
turned 70 yesterday, celebrating Saddle River Police Chief Wil
at home with his family in this Liam Smith said he occasionally
affluent North Jersey community. meets with Nixon to discuss secu- ,
Nicholas Ruwe, a Nixon spokes- rity, and Mayor Duncan Cameron
man, said no elaborate celebration said he was invited there for two
had been planned. Nixon was parties. .
home with his wife, Pat, their two
daughters and three grandchil
Neighbors said Nixon appears to old. He's in excellent shape his
be in good health'when he takes his hair isn't as gray as mine."
world news briefs
Bombs injure 9 during soccer match
AMSTERDAM, Netherlands wounded five people, occurred
(AP) Two shrapnel-filled shortly before halftime and the
bombs exploded in the stands dur- second device blew up in the mid
ing a soccer match yesterday, dle of the second half, injuring
injuring nine fans, police said. four, including two policemen.
One of the injured, a 23-year-old • Berndsen said two "probable
man, was in serious condition with culprits" a 25-year-old man and
wounds in his legs, arms and stom- a 16-year=old youth were ar
ach, Police Superintendent Wim rested.
Berndsen said. The other victims
were treated at hospitals. The superintendent said the po-
Berndsen said the homemade lice investigation indicated the
bombs exploded during a match devices had been homemade and
between the Ajax and FC-Den each contained more than a pound
Haag teams. One explosion, which of sharp metal objects.
Charles, Di arrive for Swiss holiday
ZURICH, Switzerland (AP) Buckingham Palace spokesman
Britain's Prince Charles and Prin- said. "They may well be going
cess Diana arrived yesterday for a skiing."
Swiss winter holiday and were
immediately whisked away by car The spokesman, who refused to
to an undisclosed destination. be further identified, dismissed as
A spokesman at Zurich's inter- "speculation" British and Swiss
national airport confirmed the newspaper reports that the Prince
couple arrived without their 6- and Princess of Wales would stay
month-old baby, Prince William, with former olympic skier Charlie
in a twin-engined royal jet piloted Palmer-Tompkinson, a friend who
by Prince Charles. has a five-room chalet at Klosters,
"They are going on holiday," a in the Swiss Alps.
daily morning walk
"I think he likes the town, and
we like him," said the mayor, who
also is 70. "He doesn't look that
Penn State Proud
We will publish a very special issue Tuesday.
More than 30,000 copies will be printed with
distribution throughout Central Pennsylvania.
.002 _
.1, 0 , A 41
”)
IF
th:ley Collegian
Penn State's morning newspaper
the
daily s or s • to keep yo
Rir
.44* collegian on the bal
o. o \
Congratulations
to Coach-of-the-Year Joe Paterno
and, the national champion Nittany Lions.
The nation's No. 1 college newspaper salutes
the nation's No. 1 college football team.
• A great Sugar Bowl victory.
Another winning football season.
• And a great Penn State tradition.
The Daily Collegian Monday, Jan. 10,
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