B—The Daily Collegian Town By TIM EYSTER 'Collegian Staff Writer Persistence and determination on the part of University students is essential for discovering solutions to housing problems, a former Universi ty student and borough council mem ber said yesterday. Dean Phillips, speaking at the 11th annual Organization for Town Inde pendent Students' Town Day, said students also should develop a rap port with elected officials and admin istrators so they will be able "to speak to them on their own terms." Phillips, who currently works as a clerk for the Hon. William D. Hut chinson, Supreme Court of Pennsyl vania Justice at the Schuylkill County Courthouse, was the first student to be elected to the State College Munic ipal Council in 1974. While talking about relations be tween students and immediate resi dents, Phillips stressed that it is very difficult for students to understand ~. . • Please join us on Sunday morning, March . 25, at 9:00 or 11:00, „for a very specil wor aft ship service. The theme will be "Taking up the Cross Daily," and our service will be conducted entirely by Penn State students. - , ' guest preachers: Peter deVries Junior, History Michelle Lamberson = Graduate, Geology State College Presbyterian Church Alerry Meloy Senior, Communications 132 West Beaver Avenue, Special Music: Just West of Allen Street The New Voice Choir Worship Services 9:00 & 11:00 a.m. (College-age men cf, women) It's a winner... Get bonus film and a poster, too! I I i i a I I KL6oioa c o 0 . , 0 _ v a m l .—.:._-.•.•--._-.,- color lor : I lf ilm film KOfor color prink i,,„„,(!n l 1 1 5 Exl , e SIL po,ES 2 DISCS ro 30IPOSUPIS KODACOLOR VR Disc Film A bonus pack of KODACOLOR VR Disc Film and a colorful poster of track and field stars Mary Decker, Edwin Moses and Alberto Salazar can be yours with proofs of purchase from three rolls of any Kodak color film USA : 0 4 i tt 4 NI" Ottical Idm • US luck 6 tilt ftlni. Penn State Oodictore on campus Owned and operated by the Pennsylvania State University Friday, April 13, 1984 Day: Leaders agree students need determination to raze housing problems how home owners and taxpayers feel about their property. He also said it is difficult for per manent residents of State College to understand the problems students face with tuition and high housing costs. To help solve those misunderstand ings, Phillips said students and resi dents should attempt "to find some common ground." Phillips said if students lose the battle to solve such problems as the noise and housing ordinances, they should try to contact elected officials or appointed administrators, who are willing to listen to the problems, to work out other creative and alterna tive solutions. "Don't burn your bridges," Phillips said. "Make a friend, make a contact and come back fighting in a way that will allow you to fight tomorrow, and tomorrow and tomorrow." Phillips also said it would be a good idea for OTIS members to send fresh men and sophomore members to bo- Ask for certificate and full details for the "All the Way U.S.A." bonus offer! rough council, planning commission, zoning hearing board and county commissioners meetings. By doing this, in later years, these students will be able to speak the "same language" with elected officials and appointed administrators. By having the necessary commu nication, he said, these two groups will develop a mutual respect for each other and understand common community problems. Phillips also said non-student corn- _ munity members should listen to the problems and concerns of University students, try to understand them, and, if possible; try to find solutions. In an interview after his presenta tion, Phillips said the borough noise ordinance and the three unrelated persons housing limit are not the real issues facing students. The deeper issue, he said, is the lack of afforda ble housing. "If there was affordable housing, the three-person limit would be triv ial for students," he said. ************** * * * * .* *-* * * * * * • PHI LAMBDA UPSILON * * • All chemistry-related majors welcome! ************ * * * * * * * * * * * * PPOOIICTS IIY Kodak TACO ED'S Mexican food APRIL SPECIALS All 2.75 lunch specials ONLY 1.99 All 3.75 dinners ' ONLY 2.75 (excluding Pachovilla & Chimichanga) A All lunches and dinners include refried beans, rice & taco chips- C 4 Nibp ' l 4 l l College Centre I 4 .0 1,, 1 4 ‘ 226 W. College-Ave. honorary chemistry society IS NOW ACCEPTING new members Apply in Dovey-Osmond overpass, Th., Fri., or Mon. April 12,12,16 from 12:00-2:00 p.m. Bring o transcript! Three group discussions followed Phillips' presentation. The dis cussions involved: • Housing codes and the possible use of block grant funds to improve rental housing in State College. • The best methods to facilitate increased communication and avoid conflict among all members of the community. • The strengths and weaknesses of the student as a community member. State College Borough Council President Mary Ann Haas, who, along with Borough Manager Carl Fairbanks, led the discussion on the strengths and weaknesses of the stu dent as a community member, said some members of that group seemed to feel the community had not done its part in providing housing because of the lack of choice and the cost of housing. 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'i• • y i .. 4•1111 fj til4ll ; I . ‘ , ; .,,:.t : k 4411 , ':: ' i.;'IN” OPEN NIGHTS UNTIL 8:30 M VISA, MC, AMEX, BAREFOOT CHRG CALDER taito/n*:..-.•..1i0n/world Reduced military budget gets panel approval By LEE BYRD • Associated Press Writer WASHINGTON The House Armed Services Committee yester day approved military spending next year of $295.1 billion, a record $19.7 billion cut from President Reagan's original request that in cluded scaling back manpower and pay increases and trimming pro duction of the MX missile. The package that emerged from a week of closed meetings over the Pentagon budget included reduc ing a proposed 5.5 percent pay boost for virtually all ranks of servicemen to 3.5 percent, the same as slated for the govern ment's civilian workers. The committee also cut manpow er growth by one-half for all serv ices except the Army. It agreed • • .4„,04.. i • 13*,,. • Dorothy Mimes, 29, of Erie, poses with her baby girl, Jennifer, yesterday at St. Vincent's Health Center. Jennifer, delivered by Caesarean section on Wednesday, weighed in at 17 poutids; 13.Ounce.s at birth. . • . Druse leader calls for Syrian troop intervention By FAROUK NASSAR president of Lebanon. saying "a senior Lebanese military official is in Wash- Syrians to the capital was unlikely because it could touch Associated Press Writer The Syrians left in September 1982 when the Israeli ington negotiating a new arms deal worth $BOO million., off a new confrontation with Israel. army laid siege to the Moslem sector but keep an This is a bad sign." "Syria's occupation of the Bekaa ( valley in east BEIRUT, Lebanon Druse chief Walid Jumblatt estimated 30,000 troops in northern and eastern Leb- Opposition leaders have been voicing fears that contin- Lebanon) is one thing. Syria moving into the meat yesterday joined other opposition leaders in calling for anon. Israel keeps about 15,000 troops in occupied ued U.S. arms supplies were going to Christian elements grinder called Beirut .. . that is a very big decision for Syrian troops to intervene in Beirut to end the civil war. southern Lebanon. of the, army and this might encourage Gemayel, a them," said one Western official who declined to be President Amin Gemayel's long-planned summit with In Damascus yesterday, Jumblatt told The Associated Maronite Christian, to try to stage a counterattack into identified. "I think they would really think twice." President Hafez Assad of Syria appeared delayed once Press, "The Syrians have intervened in the past and I west Beirut and the Chouf region. Warring Lebanese factions have agreed on a plan and again, and Gemayel met for an hour with U.S. Ambassa- think for the sake of Lebanon they should intervene Former President Franjieh, a Maronite Christian, a timetable to separate their forces along the green line dor Reginald Bartholomew. again." , said Tuesday that a Syrian return to the capital was "the between Christian east and mostly Moslem west Beirut, Police said sporadic sniping and occasional exchanges Jumblatt, whose militia is supported by Syria, was only sensible course of action to stop the fighting" in the the Shiite suburbs and the Druse-inhabited hills east of of mortars and rocket-propelled grenades rocked parts asked whether he felt Syrian troops ought to move into renewed civil war. the capital. But no date has been set to begin disen of the mid-city frontier yesterday, the eve of anniversary the Lebanese capital should a newly negotiated Grand Mufti Sheik Hassan Khaled, spiritual head of gagement. of the civil war. agreement to disengage Lebanon's warring factions fall Lebanon's Shiite Moslem community, and Assem Kan- Gemayel administration sources have been saying the The war broke out April 13, 1975 and the first phase apart. souh, a Shiite who heads the pro-Syrian Lebanese Baath plan would be set in motion after his projected trip to ended Nov. 21, 1976 when the Syrian army rolled into "I am not optimistic this plan can be implemented," Party, then, voiced their support. Damascus for talks with Assad on forming a national Beirut at the request of Suleiman Franjieh, then the Jumblatt said. He also doubted Gemayel's intentions, Gemayel administration sources said the return of the coalition Cabinet to carry out political reforms .- Candidates lash out at Reagan Mondale, Jackson concentrate on present Central America policy By CAROLE FELDMAN Associated Press Writer Walter Mondale called yester day for the "demilitarization• of Central America," and the Rev. Jesse Jackson asked Congress to investigate whether President Reagan committed an impeacha ble offense by allowing the CIA to support the mining of Nicaragua's harbors. As the two were stepping up their attacks on Reagan, Gary Hart was concentrating on the former vice president, cautioning against a "rerun of the 1980 elec tion" in which Mondale ran for vice president with Jimmy Carter. Mondale, campaigning in San Diego, accused Reagan of blun dering in Central America and following a policy that could lead to a "full-scale war" involving U.S. troops. . "We must consider impeach ment hearings now," Jackson said at a rally at the Arizona State University College of Law in Phoe nix before flying to the Navajo Indian Reservation. "The Congress must show it is at least as serious about stopping the escalating war in Central America as Mr. Reagan is persistant about doing the act of provocation with or without the permission of Con gress," he said. Earlier yesterday, he was asked to explain the remarks of a sup porter, Black Muslim leader Louis with Reagan's target of 780,600 Army men and women, but trimmed 16,500 from a' proposed boost of 29,000 in the other services combined. It also slowed the proposed growth of the Army National Guard and Reserve, and it trimmed nearly $lOO million re qUested for additional reimburse ments to people who change duty stations. The panel approved, essentially intact, Reagan's request for 34 B-i bombers, costing $B.l billion, but it slashed a number of other major weapons programs, including the MX missile and research on a futuristic strategic defense system which critics call the "Star Wars" plan. The panel called for buying 30 of the multiple-warhead MX intercon- 1 46 .'.;l'4A .. • ..,... 44,....4„„ ...C-, \ -..." , •••••- T.':'... - • . .:;.•ti 0 .;•,....,::: ' do ~. .„ • . . ..• e . . •. Farrakhan, who called Adolph Hitler "a great man . . wickedly great." Jackson said, "Hitler may have been great for some Nazis, but that's all. I find no pleasure in what he represented ideologically. He represents an expression of madness upon the race of the human community. We must, as a human race, reject any form of Hitler or Hitlerism." As the three candidates sought votes west of the Mississippi, Democratic Party Chairman Charles Manatt said he sees "zero" chance that the party's presidential nomination would go to anyone other than one of the three and pollster Louis Harris said his surveys indicate that Hart would fare better than Mondale in a race against President Reagan. Three Harris polls from March 17 through April 8 said 'Reagan leads Mondale by a 55-39 margin, while he is virtually tied with Hart, with only a 48-47 lead. The polls, based on telephone inter views with 4,041 likely voters, have a 2 percent margin of error. Mondale opened a three-day California campaign by strongly denouncing the CIA-backed min ing of Nicaragua's harbors. He accused Reagan of following a "blundering course" in Central America that was "widening, mili tarizing and Americanizing the conflict." tinental missiles. Reagan wanted 40. It cut $407 million from Reagan's request for $1.77 billion for prelimi nary research on what'he calls the Strategic Defense Initiative, which envisions using such exotic weap onry as laser and energy beams to destroy missiles. The committee cut three ships from the Navy's proposed buildup and reduced all other procurement by 9.2 percent. But it boosted Rea gan's request for nine items, add ing 120 M-1 Abrams tanks to the 720 he had asked. Overall, the panel's package would represent a 6 percent "real" increase in defense spending, ad justed for inflation, over the cur rent year. Reagan originally wanted a . 13 percent increase after inflation, but later agreed to lower .~,~~> Resting on bales of hay, Democratic presidential candidate Sen. Gary Hart, second from right, speaks with a group of Platte County farmers in the hayloft of a barn on a Kansas City, Mo., farm yesterday. Hart's wife, Lee, listens to his remarks at right. it to about 7.8 percent as part of a Republican-sponsored deficit re duction plan. Further cuts are likely when the bill reaches the House floor, proba bly next month. The Democratic House already has set a target boost of just 3.5 percent for defense under budget guidelines approved early this week. At that, the House committee's action represented the largest cuts it ever has imposed on a presi dent's defense budget. Last year it trimmed Reagan's request by $lO billion, the previous record. The package, actually three sep arate bills authorizing programs by the Pentagon, the Energy De partment and for military con struction, was approved 41-1, with Rep. Ronald V. Dellums, D-Calif., the lone dissenter. Baby boomer: Seventeen-pound girl delivered to Erie woman By The Associated Press new father, a self-employed home a 5-year-old girl who weighed over 9 builder. "Somebody must have had pounds, said Anderson. She was their finger on the scale." expected to be sent home with the baby in about a week. ERIE, Pa. The doctor said even he was surprised when a wom an gave birth to a 17-pound, 3-ounce baby girl. "I knew it was going to be big, but not that big," said Dr. John J. DeMarco, an obstetrician who de livered 24-inch-long Jennifer Himes by Caesarean section Wednesday at 3:18 a.m. "I really thought I was dealing with a 12 1 / 2 to 13-pounder." Dorothy Himes, 29, of Erie was in good condition at Saint Vincent Health Center, where she broke the hospital's record for the largest baby, said hospital spokeswoman Jane Anderson. The infant was described as "normal in every way" by DeMarco. Himes and her husband, Robert, 32, were also surprised by their daughter's size. AP Laserphoto "We just came here to have - -a baby, not set a record," said the ' Dellums failed by large margins in attempts to kill the B-1 bomber, the MX, the cruise and Pershing 2 missiles, and further production of Trident nuclear submarines. .The committee chairman, Rep. Melvin Price, D-111., said that even though the House already had set a lower target for defense growth, "the Senate is working toward a budget resolution providing for 7.5 percent real growth." Thus, he said, "it looks like we are heading toward a compromise on the order of 5 percent to 6 percent. Therefore the committee decided to cut the bill to reflect 6 percent real growth." The panel approved all but $9O million of Reagan's request for $2.05 billion for development of the Trident 2 submarine missile, and voted $179 million for research on a `We just came here to have a baby, not set a record. - Somebody must have had their finger on the scale.' cords lists the largest surviving babies from normal parents as two —Robert Himes 22-pound, 8-ounce boys. One was born in Italy in September 1955, the other in South Africa in May 1982. Dorothy Himes, who DeMarco pound, 4-ounce deformed infant said is 5-foot-4 and weighed. 280 born in 1939 in•Effingham, 111., have pounds when the baby was born, been born in the United States, but also has a 3-year-old boy who was they did not survive, according to born weighing over 11 pounds, and Guinness. Latest victim found in unsolved slayings By CHARLES E. BEGGS Associated Press Writer SALEM, Ore. A state trooper searching brush near a road found a body believed to be that of a college student, one of eight Salem women and girls, slain or missing in a series of unsolved crimes since 1981, a prosecutor an nounced yesterday. Marion County District Attorney Michael Brown said investigators were "virtually certain" that the body discovered Wednesday was that of 18-year-old Katherine "Katy" Redmond, whose car was abandoned Saturday a half-mile away. Brown said authorities did not immediately disclose the discov ery because darkness was coming on and they wanted to wait until crime technicians could look over the scene. Seven females ages 9 to 32 have been slain in the area since Feb ruary 1981. An eighth woman dis appeared in 1982 while delivering pizza to a phony address. All the women vanished at night, and in three cases, their cars were found abandoned. In at least two cases, the bodies were dumped into rivers. Two of the women were found shot to death in their home. A team of 20 to 25 investigators from several agencies was assem bled this week in Salem. Officers in Washington, meanwhile, are The Daily Collegian Friday, April 13, 1984 new attack submarine It cut the request for 48 new F-15 fighters to 40, saving $456 million. It also approved the procurement of 1,349 HARM surface-to-air mis siles for $550 million, a reduction of 325 missiles and $129 million. It approved eight new C5-B Gal axy transport planes for $1.9 bil lion, a reduction of two planes and $3OB million. Among the areas where the panel added to Reagan's budget were the purchase of 30,000 9mm handguns. Reagan wanted to buy 14,600. The committee also approved 24 new SH-608 Seahawk helicopters; the president asked for 18. Overall, the committee cut ship building by 9.5 percent, or $1.2 billion. It approved 27 of the 29 ships the president asked. Anderson said the infant might represent a state record, but a worker in the Pennsylvania Bureau of Health Statistics said it would take a three-day computer search of county birth certificates to find out. The search would cost $lOO, she said. The Guinness Book of World Re- Larger babies, including a 29- trying to determine if the cases are linked to the Green River deaths of 20 women in that state. Asked if there were suspects, Brown said, "I think everybody on the investigative team has some suspects." He said an autopsy on the body was planned later today. Miss Redmond, who attended Willamette University, last was seen at 2 a.m. Saturday when she left a fraternity party on the cam pus. Her car was found abandoned two hours later, engine running, on Salem's eastern outskirts about 4 miles from the university. Brown said the body was found by a state police searcher about four-tenths of a mile east of where the car was discovered. He said the body was in a wooded, brushy area several hundred yards off the road. The body was about 3 to 4 miles from where the body of 21-year-old Rebecca Ann Darling was discov ered last month. Miss Darling had disappeared from her job as a clerk in an all-night grocery store on Feb. 19. Meanwhile, another Salem woman who'd been listed as miss ing was found apparently un harmed in Northern California, her family said. Police had become concerned when Roberta Kathryn Say, 19, had not been heard from in nearly a week.
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers