Cold front sets new records from Minnesota to Miam By DAVID L. LANGFORD Associated Press Writer Spring's - sputtering engine conked out again yesterday and,Canadian cold riding in on an errant jet stream set,records from Minnesota to Miami, spreading rare mid- April snow into Dixie. Snow fell in pockets scattered from the Carolinas to Maine on the heels of a storm _ that left seven people dead or missing. In Utah, where a soggy mountain almost a mile high collapsed into Spanish Fork Canyon and plugged a river, 22 families were evacuated from one community that was virtually washed away and an entire Campus Vigil Ryna Izenson (12th•landscape architec• ture) sits contemplating on the steps in front of Pattee last night with about 50 others; some with' candles as they remember the millions of victims of the Holocaust in a vigil sponsored by Ya• chad; Friends of Israel. Please see CAMPUS, Page 2. the daily town of 6,500 people was threatened by flooding should the freak dam break. In South Carolina, the first measurable snowfall ever in April was reported in the Greenville-Spartanburg area, according to meteorologist Jim Spillers. . "It's coining down real good," said a surprised Marion Jones in the Holly Springs community. "The bushes are beginning to be covered." Dozens of cities from Duluth, Minn., to Miami posted record lows for the date as the mercury dipped into the teens in the upper Mississippi. Valley and the Great Lakes region and into the 20s from the central Appalachians to the northern Plains. olle • lan "The calendar may say it's spring, but the In New England, where up to 2 feet of weather maps are determined to conclude snow over the weekend knocked out the it's still winter," said a statement from the power to almost 100,000 people, merchants Natibnal Weather Service in North in Augusta, Maine, moved their Carolina, where up to 4 inches.of snow fell in, merchandise as chtining floodwater from the northern mountains.‘.. ', • ' the Kennebec River lapped at riverfront The mercury dropped to 12 degrees in Duluth, Minn., 5 degrees colder than the record for the date set in 1928, and 50 in . Miami, 8 degrees below the 1962 record. The 20 degree reading at Des Moines, lowa, was the coldest ever recorded so late in the season and the snowfall at Allentown, Pa., in the eastern part of the state, was the latest measurable snow since 1967 when an inch fell, on April 27. Movin' On funds pull through in narrow USG Senate vote By CHRISTINE MURRAY Cojiegian Staff Writer / The Undergraduate Student Government Senate last night, in its final meeting before the 1983-84 senators take over, allocated $750 to the budget , of the 1983 IVlovin' On, to be held May 7 and 8, and allocated $9OO for a banquet for the formal induction of the 1983-84 USG executives, senate and academic assembly personnel. The original request for the Movin' On budget was - $1,500, but the. USG appropriations committee reduced the requested amount by one-half. Senate barely passed the revised bill with a vote of 13-11. Local feel the recession By JOHN SCHLANDER Collegian Staff Writer The common perception of State College as a fantasyland a Happy Valley insulated from "real world" problems is justified in regard to the problem of unemployment. Unfortunately, Centre County as a whole is not totally covered by State College's "recession-proof" cocoon. The county jobless rate hit a recession-high 13.5 percent in . - January, while the State College rate was 6.1 percent. And some people might consider that high for State College, which dipped below 2 percent several times in the 19605. Some areas of Centre County, such as Philipsburg and Bellefonte, have been hurt. considerably by the recession, analysts said recently. About 6,300 county residents were officially unemployed in February. County industries hardest hit include electronics, coal, lime and manufacturing in general. Cerro Metal Products in Bellefonte has had the highest number of layoffs of any one company. Over the course of the recession, Cerro's employment has dropped from about 1,250 to buildings. In Guilford, Maine, more than a dozen residents of an apartment complex for the elderly along the Piscataquis River were forced to flee Sunday night after more than 2 inches of rain sent the river surging above flood stage. In California, the ground was so saturated at San Bernardino that underground springs were popping up inside buildings, such as Tuesday, April 19, 1983 Vol. 83, No. 159 14 pages University Park, Pa. 16802 Published by students of The Pennsylvania State University industries Paul Bertalan, Movin' On bands chairman, told the senate that this year would probably be the last for Movin' On, due to the switch to semesters. After a 65-minute committee break, the appropriations committee passed the bill that would allow the USG senate to allocate the funds to Movin' On. A banquet and inauguration ceremony will be held at 8 p.m. April 25, at Gatsby's, 100 W. College Ave, and is open to 150 invited USG members only. USG President Leni Barch said, that to the best of her knowledge this is the first year USG has ever had a formal induction outside the HUB. Please see MOVIN' ON, Page 2. -15r:'..r1 • - - :::''.•,.• iT.1.7..::', ' ••':.:77•/?:-tit•4 • 411.17ffs•7;:?•-; '''d',•'''',Vg"';l2F/Ofri . , -,,,-,:, ,•••:,,,,' •;:,h,,. ,:,•,.',,,V,ln''.4:iffil'e,i'if.tt','A• • •:,.. • ' : ••,:', • ,::,....,Ora;g4o;;;,pg . , • . - -•:..e.,, ,;:.• . ~,,, .:,,,F,.. ~:?..",r1 r ;.. . ,;,..4e,,,,i,!'te.44;-I:l,eit,i, .. '. ? ...,::Y::;iZOAY4,,::t:j . , ~ ~ ',.• ,'.';'; i!;4.0 ~ " 4. ~:-, 1 . ~,, W: ' .. . 1.4.....",,,...-.1,,"Vs flith , , , 1'...=.- ''Cvl-;:;';:,,i'l ..' '''''''':•., '?1`).? -1 4*''' /14$, Ilii, '.;:"t21,.!. 41°01 .'' ''''''::::•(:'li4'4iA ••" , ~ .34, MO ' `...14,..#4‘;:,,,i443,4.1 •.,7•` -;.;;Vri4.l ~,'i1z5:, ,,A 4 :1 750 at last count a 40 percent drop. Most of the layoffs occurred in 1982, said Tom Moyer, personnel director for Cerro. Some employees have been called back, he said, but the employment outlook for the company is unclear. "We have been trying, like most companies, to project when we think things are going to turn around," Moyer said, "but our crystal ball is just too clouded to make that determination." Domtar, a Bellefonte lime company, was hit too hard to make a recovery. The company, a division of a Montreal-based corporation, closed its doors last June. However, Les Confer, a Centre County resident, bought the Bellefonte property April 8. The new company, Con-lime, plans to begin selling lime in the middle of May, said Mike Cassidy, the sales director. Manufacturing is the sector hardest hit by most recessions, analysts said, and because manufaCturing provides a higher portion of jobs in areas of the county outside State College, those areas have suffered. Please see RECESSION Page 14. the Inland Cinema where the water was flowing down the aisles. In southwestern Virginia, which also got a .mid-April record of 4 inches of snow in places such as Bristol, many schools were closed because road crews had already put away some of their winter equipment. In Castleton, Vt., Robert Traverse and his family had to milk 20 cows by hand because there was no electricity for'the milking machines. _ "Between milking and letting the hands uncramp, it was, gosh, two hours to get 'em done," he said. The snow over the weekend darkened 32,000 homes in New England. inside Gary Meyer of Wellesley, Mass won the 87th Boston Marathon yesterday afternoon • Members of the Calendar Transition Grievance Committee were announced yesterday. Page 3 • The College of Education begins a faculty exchange program with the National Taiwan Normal University next fall.. Page 3 index , Opinions Sports State/nation/world weather Mostly cloudy and cold today with occasional snow flurries with periods of snow showers possible, high 37. Cloudy and cold tonight, low 28. Page 8 —by Craig Wagner