B—The Daily Collegian Wednesday, Aug. 29, 1984 PSU to get wise on energy By KATHY JO MAPES Collegian Staff Writer The U.S. Department of Energy Institutional Conservation Program recently awarded the University two grants to improve building energy efficiencies, the University manager of energy conservation and electron ics said yesterday. J. Carroll Dean said the University received the two grants from the federal program for energy conser vation studies and implementations. The University received this year’s first grant of $158,080 in July. The grant, called a Technical Assistance Grant, funds energy efficiency stud ies for buildings. The grant will finance the study of air flow systems, heat recovery sys tems, lighting modifications, storm windows and air conditioning in 27 of 190 heated University buildings, Dean said. The second grant of $327,450 will fund energy-saving installations. Dean said he submitted the proposal for that grant in May and was in formed of its acceptance in August. The grant, an Energy Conservation Measure Grant, is not as likely to be received as the Technical Assistance Grant because a high number of state IHHHnMBHHnHHB <t COPY), S SALE ,4l i h II 20# wtiltc bond. ■ | Cashi jj fl August 23 August 31 j ! King “It's a Miracle!" J | * m w m 740 S. Atherton St. I ■ Printing ““7« | Baja \J | Burrito |w : $2.09 regularly $2.59)V j ■ Beef and beans, cheese, sauce, ■ ! onions, tomatoes and cheese dip ■ I rolled together In a soft flour shell, | | surrounded with corn chips and top- | ■ ped with red chili sauce and melted ■ ■ cheese. Served w/sour cream. I I good for one order only thru 9/5/84 • lip liSpEimrs i I Mon-Thur Ilam-lam I I Fri&Sat 11am -2am | I Sun 12 noon -12 midnight coiiag. & Garni. 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Tl\e dollegian in the morning ... an o^o- opening experience! institutions make proposals for it. The institutions that show the most efficient plans for use of the money are awarded the grants, he said. Dean also said those institutions proposing to return the money within one to five years are more likely to receive this grant than the institu tions proposing a 20-year payback. The Institutional Conservation Pro gram has awarded the University at least one grant every year since the program began four years ajgo, Dean said. Ardeth Johnson, coordinator of cus tomer information and services, said convincing people to conserve energy is a major problem. People consider their individual comfort before con sidering energy conservation, she said. One step the University has taken this year is turning off unnecessary lights with a key, Johnson explained. “There is only so much you can do with the buildings, then you have to start changing people’s behavioral habits, such as the habit of leaving the lights on when leaving a room,” Dean said. Yet, the University is as energy efficient as any of the state hospitals and schools, Dean said. FAMOUS BRANDS FOR IT AT THE lISAVE ...IT WILL BE CHEAPER THAH AHYWHERE ELSE FOOD Organization Fair gets large student response By PAT COLLIER Collegian Staff Writer Although attendance was sparse during the morning hours of the Organization Fair’s first day, hun dreds of students . streamed, through the HUB Ballroom and Fishbowl yesterday afternoon to inquire about the more than 100 student organizations that were represented, an official of the Of fice of Student Organizations and Program Developmept said. The fair, which will continue from 10 a.m. to 6 p.m. today, is replacing what was formerly the Jast stop after registration in the Intramural Building, said Gayle Beyers, assistant director of the office. Phil Williams, computer chair man of the Organization for Town Independent Students, said his or ganization’s display had attracted a satisfactory number of students. “We’ve had a lot of responses,” ‘ he said. “We’ve recruited some WE WELCOME MANUFACTURER’S CENTS OFF COUPONS AND GLADLY ACCEPT GOV’T FOOD STAMPS. Located on Benner Pike, behind the Nittany Mall. SHOP WEEKLY TUES. THRU SAT. 9:00 AM. TO 9:00 PM. THE FRESHEST GREAT SELECTION DELI...LOOK WAREHOUSE CLOSED SUNDAY AND MONDAY potential new members. All in all it’s been a pretty successful day.” Overall, Williams said the Orga nization Fair was a success. “There have been a lot of people in and out this afternoon,!’ he said. Jeff Dellinger, vice president of the Campus Crusade for Christ, agreed with Williams and said,he favored the more voluntary sys tem. “I think registration takes so much emotional energy on the part of the students that they’re uninterested in the organiza tions,” Dellinger said. “It made the dubs suffer.” Dellinger said he believes that with the present system, students have had some time'to settle in and recover from registration be fore they need to think about their social activities. “Now they can think naturally about the clubs and activities that Penn State has to offer,” he said. TOP QUALITY collegian notes • Registration for the Sept. 29 • The Penn State Stamp Club will LSAT Test ends tomorrow. Anyone meet at 7:30 tonight in 207 Sackett interested in taking the test can pick up an LSAT packet in 107 Burrowes • Alpha Phi Omega, Service Fra ternity will meet at 7 tonight in 225 • The Penn State Dairy Science Electrical Engineering West Club will meet at 7:30 tonight in 117 Borland • The Free U will sponsor a course on the Baha’i* Faith at 8 tonight in 211 Eisenhower Chapel. police log • Three separate incidents of ha rassment have been reported to Uni versity Police Services within the last three days. Two victims complained of harassment by telephone and the third report was harassment by con tact, police said. • Eric Ulrich, 707 Sproul, reported • Dean Hedin, 218 Snyder Hall, to University police yesterday that reported his front bicycle tire miss the gas cap and gasoline was missing ing. University police estimated the from his vehicle and the radio anten- tire worth at $25, na was damaged while the car was WE ACCEPT PERSONAL CHECKS FOR THE AMOUNT OF PURCHASE WITH A U-SAVE CHECK CASHING-CARD. • Entries for Men’s Intramural Softball will be accepted until 4 Thursday afternoon in Room 2 of the Intramural Building. A $lO team fee will be required at the times of entry. parked in lot 83. Damage was esti mated at $35. • Judy Ingrim, 310 S. Burrowes Road, reported two dictionaries and $4O missing yesterday. The missing items were valued at $l9O, University police said. —Terry Mutchler state/nation/world S. Africans in election riots By TOM BALDWIN Associated Press Writer JOHANNESBURG, South Afri ca Election boycotters shot at police yesterday and officers opened fire with rubber bullets, police said, as Asians voted for the first time for their own segregated chamber of Parliament. With 30 of the 40 districts report ing, the turnout averaged about 18 percent of the 411,711 registered voters, according to unofficial tab ulations early this morning. The count slowed to a trickle after midnight and final results were not expected until later to day. Leading were the Solidarity Party and National Peoples Party, with each winning nine seats in the 40-seat chamber with half of the votes counted. They are the major Asian parties and were expected to control the new assembly. The size of the turnout was re garded as an expression of the degree of support among South Africa’s 850,000 Asians for the governing National Party’s new constitution and three-chambered Parliament one for one for Asians and one for people of mixed race. Candidates blamed low atten dance at the polls on intimidation by the boycotters. At least one officer was serious ly wounded when boycotters at tacked his car with rocks and overturned it in Lenasia, an Asian township outside Johannesburg, said Police Maj. Christiaan Craf ford. He said three other officers Jetliner, with 204 aboard, hijacked by Iranian couple By MOHAMMED SALEM Associated Press Writer BAGHDAD, Iraq A young, unarmed Iranian couple yesterday forced an Iran Air jetliner to fly to Iraq, where they surren dered, freed their 204 captives and said they wanted political asylum. Iran and Iraq have been at war for four years. Iran accused Iraq of sending war planes to force the hijacked plane to land in Iraq, a charge an Iraqi official called “ri diculous.” He said the hijackers would be granted asylum, and that the crew and passengers also would have that option. In New York, Iranian Ambassador Said Rajaie-Khorassani said yesterday he had asked U.N. Secretary General Javier Perez de Cuellar to use his “good offices” to seek the safe return of the airliner, its crew and Warplanes Palestinian By G.G. LABELLE Associated Press Writer BEIRUT, Lebanon Israeli warplanes attacked a suspected Palestinian guerrilla base three miles from the Syrian border yes terday in their second raid on Lebanon’s Bekaa Valley in two weeks, and dozens of people were reported killed or injured in the air raid. Sunni and Shiite Moslem mili tiamen clashed early yesterday the first time in nine years of civil war the two groups have been reported fighting each other. Two people were killed and six others wounded. Reporting on the Israeli air raid, Lebanon’s government radio and police and hospital sources in Bei rut said most of ihe casualties occurred when a three-story build ing used to house prisoners was hit and nearly demolished. Israeli military sources in Tel Aviv said the base was'a com mand and staging post for Pales tinian guerrillas loyal to dissident Palestinian Col. Saeed Mousa, also known as Abu Mousa. Reports conflicted on the exact number of casualties. The state radio said 25 dead were pulled from thej building, and the police sources, who spoke on condition they not be identified, said the dead included guards at the make shift prison and imprisoned guer rillas loyal to Arafat. The sources said as many as 40 prisoners may have been held in the building. Abu Mousa told reporters the air raid had taken the lives of four of his fighters and four Lebanese suffered minor,wounds. Scores of boycotters were wounded in clashes with police in Lenasia Police said the gunfire broke out in Lenasia during confrontations between police and crowds of peo ple urging an elections boycott, and that fighting continued there after sundown. They said protes ters threw gasoline bombs. Police said they fired rubber bullets into crowds of protesters. “Three shots were fired at po lice from one unknown car,” Craf ford said, but no one inside was hit. Residents in Lenasia reported the violence subsided shortly be fore midnight. Boycott organizers said the ex pected low turnout would discredit the election. They contend the all white chamber of Parliament will dominate the separate houses for Asians and people of mixed race because it has veto power over the new chambers. The nation’s 22 million blacks still have no vote or representation. Candidates acknowledged the new system was flawed, but said participation was the only way to force change from within the gov ernment. And Prime Minister P.W. Botha said his government will seat the three chambers whatever the voter turnout in September. After a similar election boycott effort, 30 percent of registered voters of mixed race legally designated as “coloreds” in South Africa elected their own cham ber of Parliament on Aug. 22. all passengers, including the hijackers. Francois Giuliani, spokesman for Perez de Cuellar, said the secretary general would do “whatever he could to help.'” The male hijacker, who identified himself only by his given name Behrouz told, reporters at Baghdad airport that he and his girlfriend were “planning to request politi cal asylum in Iraq, because this is the only country where we can live freely.” Behrouz said he and his girlfriend, identi fied only by her first name, Ferechte, “com mandeered the plane 10 minutes after it took off from Shiraz,” a city in southern Iran, on a flight to Tehran, the Iranian capital. “We did not use any weapons to hijack the plane. We only told the captain that we have explosives . . . and that we would set them off if he did not proceed to Iraq,” Behrouz attack base civilians. He said five people were injured, but denied the building had been used as a prison, saying instead that it was “a military base.” The government radio said bull dozers were still working well after dark to clear rubble in a search for victims. It said the toll of dead and wounded could rise to 100. In Damascus, a spokesman for the PLO rebels maintained that none of their fighters was killed and that the building that was hit housed Lebanese farmers. He said four people were killed and four wounded, all Lebanese civilians. Reporters were blocked from the area, about 25 miles east of Beirut. The Israeli military command said the jets hit near the village of Majdel Anjar and returned safely to their base in Israel. It said the targets were command and stag ing posts of PLO guerrillas headed by Abu Mousa. Another PLO base five miles away was attacked by Israeli jets Aug. 16. The Israeli statement about yes terday’s five-minute air raid the 14th such Israeli raid this year gave no reason for the action. The battle between Sunni and Shiite militiamen in predominant ly Moslem west Beirut’s Tarik Jedida neighborhood began when Shiite Moslem militiamen seized and killed the Sunni owner of a gambling 1 , parlor, A Sunni militiaman later told reporters that members of a small militia headed by the Sunni vic tim’s brother spread out through the area. Radiation protest Two of the protesters donned gas masks for a public meeting in West Orange last night to discuss the storage of radon-contaminated soil at a national guard armory. said in Farsi, the language of Iran. An Iraqi official translated his words into Arabic. “It was an easy job. We didn’t have a single problem,” Behrouz said. “The cap tain and the crew and the. passengers were very sympathetic. They congratulated us when we landed in Iraq.” ' Ferechte smiled as she sat next to Be hrouz. She said nothing. Iraqi officials escorted reporters to the airport’s VIP lounge to interview the cou ple. Although reporters saw the passengers and crew of the hijacked jetliner at the airport, they were not allowed to speak to them. The passengers and crew were taken to a Baghdad hotel for the night, Iraqi officials said. A senior official for the Iraqi Information Ministry said the hijackers “will certainly be granted political asylum.” He said the Sunken French freighter surveyed By RAF CASERT Associated Press Writer OSTEND, Belgium Salvage company divers yesterday sur veyed the wreck of the sunken French freighter Mont Louis, 12 miles off the Belgian coast, in pre paration for the delicate task of retrieving 225 tons of radioactive cargo from the bottom of the North Sea. Belgian Environment Minister Firmin Aerts and Guy Lengagne, France’s secretary of state respon sible for maritime transport, ob served the North Sea wreck yesterday from the French navy patrol ship Glaive. The Mont Louis is resting in 46 feet of water at low tide, when its hull breaks the surface of the water. Later Lengagne told reporters: “Divers have surveyed the site and the real work can start toward the end of this week. The salvaging will take three weeks, weather permit ting.” The Glaive has hovered near the 4,210-ton Mont Louis since the freighter sank on Saturday after colliding with a big car ferry carry ing more than 1,000 people from the Netherlands to England. No one was hurt. Aerts’ spokesman, John Huyle broeck, said French navy divers surveyed the wreck Monday night and found its cargo intact, including 30 steel containers of uranium hex afluoride in crystal form. The radioactive material as a gas is used in refining uranium. The cargo was bound from Le Havre, France, to Riga, in the Soviet re public of Latvia, for enrichment of uranium to be used in West Euro pean power plants. “There is no damage to the con- The wreck of the French cargo ship Mont Louis lies on its side. The owner of the French ship has asked two salvage firms to retrieve the cargo. tainers,” Huylebroeck said, adding Rotterdam, the Netherlands, the service. that continuous sampling of water other from L’Unionde Remorquage Henk Drenth, a spokesman for near the site showed no radioactive et de Sauvetage of Antwerp, Belgi- the Dutch salvagers, said in Rotter contamination. um arrived at the wreck site dam that divers carried out an Divers and two salvage vessels yesterday, said Marc Claus, nauti- initial survey of the wreck y ester one from Smit Tak International of cal director of the Belgian pilot day afternoon. Ugandan unrest: 750,000 flee northern skirmishes By ROBERT WELLER Associated Press Writer MPIGI DISTRICT, Uganda - Hundreds of thousands of Ugan dans from the Mpigi, Luwero and Mubepde districts have fled their fertile land in fear of persisting violence, although there has been no large-scale fighting in the area since 1982. The government of President Milton Obote estimates that 750,- 000 people have been displaced by fighting in the three districts north and west of the capital the “Luwero Triangle.” The former inhabitants are peo ple of the once-dominant Baganda tribe from whom the guerrillas fighting Obote draw their strength. Few have returned home, al though almost any habitable place in this verdant, hilly land could be cultivated and quickly grow fruit. But army operations against the rebels continue, and the United States and human rights groups allege that army troops have killed or starved to death about 200,000 people in such operations. Obote’s government will not es timate the number of dead in the war but called the claims of up to i 200,000 exaggerated. Obote said in a speech on Sunday that he would not negotiate with the guerrillas, who claim his presidency is fraud ulent. The Bagandans have opposed Obote since he overthrew the Ba gandan monarchy in 1965. Obote himself was toppled in 1971 by Idi Amin, a Kakwa tribesman, and returned to power after a 1980 election following Amin’s ouster and two interim governments. passengers and crew would have three choices: “To stay in Iraq, return to Iran, or leave for any destination they choose.” The official, who spoke on condition of anonymity, dismissed the Iranian claim that the jetliner was forced to land in Iraq. “This Iranian claim is ridiculous,” he said. “You have two Iranian citizens here who are stating they have hijacked the plane.” Behrouz said the pilot "received Iraqi approval to land in Iraq while we were in Kuwaiti air space and we then proceeded directly to Iraq.” The plane was denied landing permission in Kuwait. There was no explanation why the hijacked jet went to Kuwait from Iran before landing in Iraq. Iraqi officials refused to say where the hijacked Airbus landed. The passengers, crew and the two hijackers were flown to Baghdad on two Iraqi Airways jets. The Daily Collegian Wednesday, Aug. 29, 1984 Yesterday, opposition leader Paul Ssemogerere called on the government to begin peace talks with rebels, saying that from 300,- 000 to 500,000 people have already died and 1 million have been dis placed in the four-year war. Ssemogerere, leader of the mi nority Democratic Party, told a news conference most of the deaths resulted, from “massive retaliations by government troops whenever and wherever guerrillas strike.” Ssemogerere said there was no military solution to the insurgency because victory by either side would lead to bloody reprisals. The insurgents of the National Resistance Army are led by Yowe ri K. Museveni, who briefly served as defense minister after Tanzani an troops ousted Amin in 1979. Museveni and the Democratic Party claim the December 1980 voting that brought Obote’s Ugan da People’s Congress to power was rigged. Ssemogerere said yesterday that the United States, Britain and European Common Market na tions should force Obote to nego tiate an end to the war. Triangle refugees, interviewed in Kampala, backed a claim by Anglican Bishop Misaeri Kauma of Kampala that more people have died since Obote took power than during the B'/2-year rule by Amin, whose name was a dread word in Uganda by the time he was over thrown. A clergyman in the area, who spoke on condition neither he nor his church was identified for fear of reprisals, said the few people who have returned to Mpigi are token representatives. The official Iranian news agency, in a report monitored in Cyprus, said the hi jacked jet landed at an Iraqi military base near Shatrah, some 150 miles southeast of the Iraqi capital. The Islamic Republic News Agency said the plane carried 195 passengers and 11 crew members. IRNA quoted an unidentified Iranian For eign Ministry spokesman as saying “this is the first time in the history of world aviation that a passenger plane has been hijacked and forced to land with the help and under pressure exerted by a country’s fighter planes.” The Iranian news agency added: "Even though the hijackers were liable to prosecu tion and punishment under international law, as expected a press conference has been arranged for them at Baghdad air port.”
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