state/nation/world A smiling Nancy First Lady Nancy Reagan holds up a t•shirt during a ceremony aboard the USS America recently. She spent the day touring the carrier and learning about the Navy's drug and alcohol abuse programs. Drought affects Eastern Pa. and New England By The Associated Press HARRISBURG Drought con ditions are still at emergency lev els in the Delaware River Basin, even though heavy thunderstorms in the area's northern region have helped slow the drain on New York state reservoirs, a Pennsylvania official said yesterday. "The southern portion of the basin did not receive as much rain, as evidenced by the flow of the Schuylkill River at Philadel phia, which is only 28 percent of its normal flow for this time of year," said Pennsylvania Environmental Resources Secretary Nicholas De- Benedictis. A drought emergency is in effect for 16 eastern Pennsylvania coun ties, imposing restrictions on wa ter use Tor up to 5 million people. Deßenedictis said rainfall defi cits in the basin have not improved and the accumulated precipitation shoitfall since last August ranges from 10 inches in Lebanon County to 16 inches in Bucks County. The winds and air masses that steer rainstorms have caused the water shortages such as Pennsyl vania's all across the Northeast. They also have caused crop-wast ing drought in the Dakotas and Montana, with a dry summer sun also parching crops and people in Minnesota, lowa and Wisconsin. Crop losses in one Wisconsin county alone are put at $23 million. Water-short Northeasterners are paying the price now for what happened several miles overhead last winter and spring, Ken Berg mann, meterologist with the Cli mate Analysis Center of the National Weather Service said Yesterday. • Normally that time of year, up per-level winds at 30,000 feet steer huge rainstorms up the Eastern seaboard from their birth in the Southeast. But this past winter and spring, that pattern appeared far less frequently than usual. More often, it was shifted to the west, so storms formed in the Texas and Oklahoma area and moved toward the Great Lakes, Bergmann said. Rainfall over most of the East Coast has been normal the last two months, he said, but the water deficit from the earlier dryness has not been fixed. Mandatory conservation is in effect in the New York City area, 218 northern New Jersey commu nities and 25 in mostly eastern Massachusetts, where eight other towns have voluntary restrictions. Despite heavy rain this week up to 2.2 inches Monday and Tues day —a 4-month-old drought emer gency remains in effect in New York City, largely because most of its reservoirs are 100 miles to the north. The city, for only the second time in history, is drawing water from the Hudson River 100 million gallons a day. Hundreds of inspectors are checking compliance with the drought emergency requirement that temperatures remain above 78 degrees in buildings cooled with city 'water. Fines of $lOO to $5OO can be levied for violations. Fines also are being issued for leaks, washing cars and streets, watering lawns, turning on foun tains using public water, illegal use of fire hydrants end filling private swimming pools. New Jersey Gov. Thomas Kean last week lifted 50-gallon-a-day rationing in 93 communities, but left in place restrictions including bans on lawn watering, hosing streets and non-commercial car washing in those and 125 other cities. Current dryness in Montana and the Dakotas comes from a high pressure ridge over the Rocky Mountains. The ridge, at 18,000 to 30,000 feet, has been diverting east-bound storms from the Pacif ic Ocean toward Canada, weather service meteorologist Donald Stoltz in Bismarck, N.D., said yesterday. It also has blocked the flow of moisture into the area from the Gulf of Mexico, cutting off a vital ingredient for afternoon and eve ning thunderstorms, he said. The dry spell has been devastat ing. "In terms of crop production, fire potential, water supplies, we clearly have a drought of historic proportions and that includes the dry 19305," said Montana Gov. Ted Schwinden, a wheat farmer. Many Montana ranchers are having to sell herds because feed is scarce, and about 30 of the 56 counties have sought agriculture disaster designation. In western North Dakota, state Agriculture Commissioner Kent Jones said, the drought is so se vere that some farmers had to go 20 miles to find hay. And in South Dakota, Gov. Bill Janklow has requested federal disaster decla rations for 26 counties where offi cials say half the grain crop has withered and much of the hay and pasture has disappeared. Drops in farm yields also are expected in southeastern Minneso ta, said John Evers, manager of a Dill Co. grain elevator in Waba sha. In the northern Grain Belt, farmers are expecting below-nor mal yields and officials are keep ing an eye on tinder-dry forests like those that have been•ablaze for nearly a month in the West. The situation is "very, very crit ical" for crop development in the southern third of Wisconsin, said Beth Kurth of the Agricultural Stabilization and Conservation Service office in lowa City. The bone-dry weather has with ered at least 40 percent of the crops for 1,500 to 1,700 farmers in Vernon County alone, with losses of some $23 million, said Jack Stintzi, head of the ASCS office in Viroqua, Wis. In lowa, "we're running out of moisture," climatologist Paul Waite said Wednesday. "In the next DR days we'll probably be out in a big share of the state. At this point, when everyone is running out of water, it's pretty hard to be optimistic. There's no signs yet there's going to be a reversal." Economy sluggish in 2nd quarter By MARTIN CRUTSINGER Associated Press Writer WASHINGTON, D.C. The economy grew at a sluggish 1.7 percent annual rate from April through June as a foreign trade hemorrhage continued to rob U.S. manufacturers of sales, the government said yesterday. Faced with the latest bad news, the Reagan administration conceded that its initial forecast for 1985 growth would have to be revised down ward, but Commerce Secretary Malcolm Bal drige insisted he saw signs of better days ahead. However, private economists were not so opti mistic, contending that the country's disastrous trading performance would continue to be a drag on growth for most of the year. The Commerce Department announced that the gross national product, the broadest measure of economic health, grew at an annual rate of 1.7 percent during the second quarter following an even weaker 0.3 percent pace during the first three months of the year. The two weak quarters mean that for the first six months of the year, the economy has expand ed at a disappointing annual rate of just 1 percent Law enforcement questioned By CHRISTOPHER CONNELL Associated Press Writer WASHINGTON, D.C. Civil rights lawyers charged yesterday that the Reagan administration has abandoned strict enforcement of the laws that forbid schools and colleges to discriminate by race, sex or handicap. A House Government Operations subcommittee called Harry M. Sin gleton, the Education Depart ment's assistant secretary for civil rights, to answer those charges and demanded records on school dis crimination cases that Singleton has referred to the Justice Depart ment. Singleton suggested that the law makers would be showering him with praise if they realized how much progress he has made in eliminating backlogs in investiga tions by the Office for Civil Rights (OCR). "You listen to the critics and you'd think we'd totally abandoned enforcement. Nothing could be fur ther from the truth," the civil rights official said. But Marcia Greenberger of the National Women's Law. Center Burger battle ends in court LONDON (AP) The Battle of the Burgers between Americari fast-food giants McDonald's and Burger King ended in a London High Court on yesterday with each side claiming it had singed the other. After five days of testimony, Judge John Whitford granted McDonald's an injunction barring Burger King from using an advertisement that knocked Mc- Donald's bestselling burger, the Big Mac. But the judge rejected McDonald's claim that Burg er King, home of The Whopper, had maliciously implied McDonald's hamburgers were less than 100 percent beef. Whitford said that from photos presented as evi dence it was clear that the Big Mac was "quite a mouthful." "It was described as McDonald's flagship product but not with reference to the ease with which it can be sunk," the judge said. ' • . 141elik“.• —• • a,-."kv• Killing the whales A Farce Islander swings a gaff hook to pull in a pilot whale for killing with a knife. This scene of massive whale killing early this month provoked demands to the International Whaling Commission meeting in Bournemouth England for more stringent means to prevent the killings that have occured in Europe for many years. charged that schools and colleges are "backsliding" because "the message has been sent out loud and clear to schools all over this coun try• that the government is not serious about enforcing these laws." Singleton sparred with Rep. Ted Weiss, D-N.Y., chairman of the subcommittee on intergovernmen tal relations and human resources, over the OCR's failure to turn over copies of 22 or 23 cases it referred to the Justice Department for pos sible civil action. Singleton said his office did not keep copies of those cases, except perhaps for "a ragtag collection" of documents that individual OCR lawyers may have kept. Weiss said, "My information is the testimony you have given us is not accurate." He demanded that Singleton check further with aides. Singleton repeatedly suggested that Weiss asked the Justice De partment for the documents. ' A disgruntled OCR employee, Antonio J. Califa, said, "There's been a marked decrease in the office's vigor in enfoicing the law." He charged the staff spends a lot of time "filling out management re- far below expectations of both private and government economists when the year began. Baldrige told reporters the administration will be forced to revise downward its current 3.9 percent estimate for GNP growth for the full year. • • While he refused to say what the new yearly figure would be, he predicted growth at a rate of 4 percent "plus or minus" in the second half of 1985. "We see all the building blocks for increased growth," Baldrige said, citing low inflation lev els, continued strong consumer confidence and low business inventories. "These factors are clearly going to be enough to overcome any drag on the economy from the trade deficit." But many private analysts were less opti mistic. "At this point the factors dragging down the economy are more powerful than those pushing it up," said Jerry Jasinowski, chief economist for the National Association of Manufacturers. He said he did not expect any major upturn in activity until the final three months of the year. Allen Sinai, chief economist for Shearson Leh man Brothers Inc., said the economy was likely McDonald's sued its arch-rival for alleged trade libel over a three-month 1983 ad campaign in the London subway system. Burger King had posted ads picturing a huge ham burger and the slogan, "It's Not Just Big, Mac." In smaller print, the ad described The Whopper and said: "Unlike some burgers, it's 100 percent pure beef." McDonald's complained that Burger King used its product name to lure away customers and alleged that the reference to 100 percent beef was libel by innuendo. In granting the injunction, Whitford said the adver tisement could mislead some people into thinking the Big Mac was a Burger King product. McDonald's, which has 168 restaurants in Britain, commissioned a Gallup Poll for the trial showing that 55 percent of 1,000 people surveyed thought the ad was for a Big Mac. Burger King, which operates 10 restau rants in Britain, argued that the poll was not valid. ports and listing how much time you worked on the computer...but there's not a lot of civil rights enforcement going on." Califa said he was removed last November as director of the policy and enforcement service and "put in a small office, given no tele phone, no secretary and told to look at policy for the last 20 years." He said he is quitting to work for the American Civil Liberties Union. The Office for Civil Rights has been under federal court orders for more than a decade to follow timetables and file regular reports to Congress on its efforts to force states to upgrade once-segregated colleges and on its handling of complaints about discrimination against women and handicapped students. Singleton said the average age of pending complaints has dropped from 1,297 days at the end of fiscal 1982 to 229 days at the close of fiscal 1984. He said the courts should stop making OCR comply with timeta bles for investigating cases. Rep. Robert S. Walker, R-Pa., the ranking minority member of the subcommittee, called it "a red tape manufacturer's dream_...." :..,01 - The Daily Collegian Friday, July 19, 1985 to remain in a growth recession a period of rising unemployment but not a full-blown recession. In another sign of weakness, the government said production at the nation's factories, mines and utilities increased a slight 0.1 percent in June, matching a revised 0.1 percent May in crease. Since last fall, industrial production has shown little improvement as domestic manufacturers have continued to lose sales to foreigners be cause of the strength of the dollar against foreign currencies. A strong dollar has encouraged a flood of cheaper imports in this country while holding down sales of U.S. goods overseas. While hurting economic growth, the strong dollar has held down inflation. The new GNP report said a price measure tied to the GNP rose at an annual rate of just 2.8 percent in the second quarter, far below the 5.4 percent pace in the first quarter. The government said weaker than originally expected export sales were the main reason that GNP growth during the April-June quarter was revised downward. Museum chemical leak is disputed By ROBERT FURLOW Associated Press Writer WASHINGTON, D.C. Smith sonian Institution museums, among the nation's most popular tourist attractions, will get emer gency safety inspections today after a report that electrical transformers there are leaking potentially hazardous chemicals, officials said yesterday. "There's absolutely no hazard to the public," said Madeleine Jacobs, assistant to the Smithso nian's public affairs director. However, • the Environmental Protection Agency announced it would quickly inspect all 57 Smithsonian high-voltage trans formers that use PCBs as a cool ant. The transformers are in mu seums including the popular Museum of American History, Museum of Natural History and the National Air and Space Mu seum that are visited by about 30 million people a year on the National Mall between the Capi tol and the Washington Mon ument. The inspection was sparked by a Washington Post report that District of Columbia Fire Depart ment officials had found one building's transformers leaking PCBs that they felt would be a major danger in case of fire. "We're ecstatic that EPA is doing this," fire department spokesman Ray Alfred said yes terday, adding that he wished such inspections would be greatly expanded. PCBs have caused cancer in laboratory animal tests, and they are no longer manufactured in the United States. However, the EPA estimates that more than 100,000 U.S. buildings still have PCB-containing transformers. Those transformers are gener ally kept away from the general public in secure vaults, as at the Smithsonian, greatly reducing any danger of direct contact. However, the EPA has recently become more concerned about what happens when PCBs burn forming other chemicals, includ ing powerful cancer-causing agents such as dioxins and are carried through a building on soot from a transformer ruptured in a fire. New EPA regulations, ap proved earlier this month, will require removal or special addi tional protection of such trans formers in public buildings by the end of 1990. "Any place where there would be a major PCB fire, there would certainly be a problem," said the Smithsonian's Ms. Jacobs. However, she added, "the key is that we feel our equipment is maintained in such condition that the danger of fire is minimal." EPA spokesman Dave Ryan said an inspection team based in Annapolis, Md., would "just in spect" the situation early this morning. Another Smithsonian official, assistant secretary John F. Jameson, told employees in a memorandum yesterday: "The Smithsonian's transformers do not 'leak' PCBs in any quantity." state news briefs $3lO million surplus for Pa. HARRISBURG (AP) Pennsylvania ended fiscal 1984-85 with a $3lO million surplus, as an improving economy generated more income- and sales-tax revenues than expected, state officials said yesterday. The state's general fund received $8.87 billion in revenues, $305.6 million more than expected, the largest such excess in state history, Revenue Department spokeswoman Pat Wood said. Unspent funds and accounting changes brought the final surplus figure to $3lO million for the year ending June 30, she said. Gov. Dick Thornburgh and state legislators cited surplus projec tions earlier this year in supporting tax cuts and spending increas es later approved by the General Assembly. According to the department, corporate net income tax collec tions in 1984-85 exceeded projections by $123.4 million, or 15.2 percent, because of strong earnings by many companies. Sales and use tax revenues were $102.6 million more than expected while personal income tax collections were $73.2 million above projections, the department said. nation news briefs Madonna turned down for co-op NEW YORK (AP) Being a material girl was not sufficient When rock superstar Madonna tried to get - past the co-op board of the ritzy San Remo on Central Park to buy a $1.2 million apart ment. , The woman selling the apartment and the agent hoping to engineer the sale hinted yesterday that Madonna's image her nude photos are in the current issues of Penthouse and Playboy may have put off board members. The 26-year-old pop sensation got the bad news Wednesday from the San Remo Tenants Corp., which did not make public its reasons for rejection. "I don't know what they're doing but there's no reason why the young woman should not be living here," said real estate agent Phyllis Koch, who also lives in the San Remo. "Madonna is a sensational young woman ... tremendously talented. She works on a very high level and I would be pleased to have her as a neighbor." Asked if she knew why the board turned Madonna down, Ms. Koch said: "I don't know who or why or what. The world is made up of people who have their own personal problems." Chemical explosions kills two LOUISVILLE, Ky. (AP) A chemical storage tank ignited and ruptured yesterday afternoon, setting off a series of explosions that killed two people and forced about 100 people to flee their homes, officials said. The fire and explosions at Borden Chemical Co. started around 2:15 p.m. and spread to several other tanks before firefighters brogght the blaze under control about an hour later, said Jefferson County police Lt. Charles Cook. He said two people were killed. Site manager Chuck Stevens said a spark may have ignited methanol near a tank of varnish. At least one person was severely burned, and residents of four nearby streets in southwestern Jefferson County were evacuated, said county police Lt. Charles Cook. About 100 people left their homes, and most were staying at a nearby church, he said. Cook the immediate danger was over, and a spokeswoman at the plant said employees were expected to resume work at the plant last night. 11 t i I FTC head up for budget director WASHINGTON, D.C. (AP ) President Reagan is expected to choose a successor to budget director David A. Stockman by the end of the week, with Federal Trade Commission chairman James C. Miller 111 reportedly the leading candidate. Some congressional sources said yesterday they had been told that Reagan had already decided to nominate Miller for the job, but the White House said no decision had been made. "No one has been offered the job," spokesman Larry Speakes said. "The president has not made a decision, nor have there been any recommendations to him." Speakes said White House chief of staff Donald Regan was still interviewing candidates and would probably make a recommenda tion to the president by the end of the week. The spokesman said Reagan's choice was likely to be announced at that time. d ! 1 The congressional sources, speaking on condition they not be identified, said the administration was spreading the word that Miller would be named. Stockman, budget director since 1981, is resigning Aug. 1 to join the New York investment banking firm of Salomon Brothers. "There is a list and the list has been narrowed, but it includes a number of names," Speakes said. Man becomes M.D. after crash LOS ANGELES (AP) Don't say "I can't'! around Emmett Cox, who made liars of doctors who thought he wouldn't survive a horrifying bicycle crash. He endured 25 operations and became a doctor himself. "I've used my own self-esteem and determination to get where I am today," said Cox, 35, intern of the year at Martin Luther King Jr. Medical Center. "I've had a lot of setbacks in my life, but I'm not going•to let that get to me." His determination also earned him a residency in the hospital's orthopedic surgery unit over dozens of other top medical students nationwide. In August 1978, the only question was whether Emmett Cox II would live. He was pedaling his bicycle near the St. George's Medical School in Grenada, where he was in his fourth semester. He collided with a school bus, crashing through the windshield. His friends thought he was dead. His nasal bridge was gone. So was his forehead. His upper jaw was broken, his teeth shoved to one side of his face. The outer covering of his brain was exposed, and a piece of glass was lodged in one eye. Hardly anything was left of his face. Days later, he risked a look in the mirror. He thought he was hallucinating. r world : news briefs Riots kill 10 in India NEW DELHI, India (AP) Rioting claimed 10 more lives in Gujarat state, and student leaders there said yesterday they would call off the agitation against government policies that started the bloodshed four months ago: The students also said after a nine-hour meeting with state officials that they would cancel a "fill the jails" campaign of inviting arrest, which had been scheduled for today. Students from the upper and middle classes began demonstrat ing early this year against plans by the government of Gujarat, in western India, to increase the number of jobs and university places reserved for people of India's lower social castes. Demonstrations led to riots, then the violence expanded to include pitched battles between the Moslem and Hindu commu nities that had little or nothing to do with the original protest. More than 200 people have been killed and many times that number injured, including 100 since Wednesday night alone. Most of the riots have in Ahmedabad, capital of Gujarat. J.F. Ribiero, state police director, said indefinite curfews were imposed on several Ahmedabad neighborhoods yesterday and he ordered his men to shoot if necessary to stop looters and arsonists. With the dawn comes daily the Collegian • Car Stere an 1 H ,me Specialists PAUL & TONY'S STEREO 315 1 / 2 W. ' eav_ r . C flue a. 1" 1 • • . ( 1,1 237-.152 , • 21 N rth Court St., Athens. hi 457 1 Open 10-6 Mon.-Sat. MIME VISA' UMW The Daily Collegian Friday, July 19, 1985