New alcohol curbs proposed By ALAN J. CRAVER Collegian Staff Writer The structure of fraternity and residence hall parties will change if the University strengthens its alcohol policies as recommended by the President’s Task Force on Alcohol, which released its report yesterday. Some of the changes would im pose limits on the length of parties, the number of guests and the num ber of kegs tapped at one time, task force Co-chairman M. Lee Upcraft said. “There’s going to be a lot of controversy,” Upcraft said, “and the task force will be right in the middle of it.” The 56 task force recommenda tions will be presented to Universi ty President Bryce Jordan on Oct. 15. Upcraft, also division director of counseling and health services, said the most debated aspects of the recommendation concern greek organizations, while consen sus was found for most of the other recommendations. However, Upcraft said he ex pects changes to be made to these preliminary recommendations af ter the task force meets with stu dents and administrators through next month. Upcraft said fraternities are not satisfied with the task force’s rec ommendations because the task force went far beyond what is al ready in practice “To put it mildly,” Upcraft said, “(the fraternities’ representa tives) didn’t seem too thrilled by the recommendations.” . Under the recommendations, if they are accepted: • Open fraternity parties will be prohibited and an invitation list will be required for both men and women. • Identification to determine the age of each brother, sister and guest will have to be checked. The 21-year-old guests will have their hands stamped, but the fraternity will decide who will be served if a guest is younger than 21. Alcohol task force seeks input nic Council, 6:30 Monday night in the HUB Gallery Lounge; the Organization of Town Independent Stu dents, 7 Monday night in 307 HUB; Interfraternity Now that the University President’s Task Force on Council, 7 : 30 Monday night at Kappa Sigma fraternity, Alcohol has completed preliminary recommendations, 225 Highland Drive; and the Association of Residence the next step will be to gain input from students, Hall Students, 6:30 p.m. Sept. 30 in 225 HUB. organizations and administrators, a co-chairman of Open hearings for residence hall students are sched the task force said. uled for: North Halls, 7 p.m. Sept. 24 in the Warnock M. Lee Upcraft, division director of counseling and Union Building; West Halls, 7 p.m. Sept. 24 m the health services, said the task force began revising Hamilton Lounge; Pollock-Nittany-Center, 7 p.m. University policies concerning alcohol use last Feb- Sept. 26 in the Piano Lounge; South Halls, 7 p.m. Sept, ruary to control student problemscaused by alcohol 30 in Haller Lounge; East Halls, 7 p.m. Oct. 2in the G. abuse, such as declining grades, and to reduce the Clark Lounge, Upcraft said. . risks of liability The task force also will hold an open hearing for Upcraft said meetings have been scheduled through students living off campus and anyone else interested the beginning of October to learn students’ opinions on P ' ' P '. changed. He said the community members of the task force Upcraft said it is important for students to attend wm be responsi bi e for scheduling meetings with orga these meetings because the recommendations direct- in towll) such as t he State College Chamber of ly affect the student s social life. Commerce and the State College area schools. Undergraduate Student Government President Da- Tbe force ' will hold a f u n meeting Oct. 10 to vid Rosenblatt, co-chairman of the task force, said the consider the information collected during the meetings meetings are essential because students will have a an(J hearings and w jn finalize their report, which will chance to give iput to the final document. be giyen to university President Bryce Jordan by Oct. By ALAN J. CRAVER Collegian Staff Writer This is an issue in which students will have a chance 15, Upcraft said, to make a difference for future students, Rosenblatt Upcraft said anyone who may have comments or sa id. questions concerning the recommendation can write to The task force is scheduled to meet with the follow- him or Rosenblatt. Upcraft can be reached at Counsel ing organizations: the University Student Executive ing and Health Services, 135 Boucke, and Rosenblatt at Council, 6:30 Thursday night in 227 HUB; thePanhelle- the USG office, 203 HUB. Pattern of study Janet Wlesgerber (freshman-french-buslness) enjoys the afternoon sun and shadows while studying In the alcove outside of Walker Building. the daily • The number of guests at each fraternity function will be deter mined by the Centre Region Code Enforcement regulations. • Only bartenders who have completed the bartender-server liability workshop offered by the Total Alcohol Awareness Program will be allowed to serve alcoholic beverages. The bartenders will not be allowed to drink alcohol before or during bartending. • Chapter presidents and social chairmen also will have to com plete the five-hour server liability course. • Drinking games and contests that encourage drinking will be forbidden and only one drink will be allowed to be served to a person at a time. • The keg will have to be checked one hour before the end of the event and if half a keg remains, the hosts will not be allowed to tap another keg. Upcraft said the task force also recommends that IFC develops and implements a “dry rush” pro gram. The fraternities are running a great risk of being held liable for the actions of those served alcohol at their parties, Upcraft said, add ing that fraternities should accept further regulations because they are partly responsible for the in crease of alcohol abuse at the Uni versity. “This is an attempt to say to fraternities that they are in a very risky and dangerous situation that implicates the University,” Up craft said. “The University can’t sit by and see the fraternities put them at risk.” The University is now in court for two liability cases one that oc curred on campus and another in town, Upcraft said last week. He said three other cases also may go to court, including one involving a high school student who was killed in an automobile accident after two University students served him alcohol. Undergraduate Student Govern ment President David Rosenblatt said not only fraternities but the Collegian entire University needs to accept the responsibilities of drinking. Be cause the courts are cracking down on liability cases, there is a greater need for the awareness of laws concerning alcohol use, he said. The recommendations dictate that all groups or clubs that use University facilities for their func tions must follow most of the rec ommendations for fraternities and sororities, Upcraft said. Upcraft said the task force does not yet have recommendations concerning tailgating, but the poli cy and rules subcommittee will report soon. The recommendations also in clude: • All fraternity and residence hall activities must specify begin ning and ending times, but no func tion will be allowed to last later than 1 a.m. A non-alcoholic bever age other than water and snacks must be served at all functions when alcohol is served. Only one keg will be allowed to be tapped at a time. • Residence hall students will be required to report all parties where alcohol will be served to the coordinator’s office two days be fore the party. The host will have to provide proof of the roommate’s consent and indicate the time, date, location and the number of guests expected at the party. • Upcraft said hosts will not be allowed to charge guests before or during the party and no parties will be allowed during final examina tion week. • The resident assistant will re mind students of the regulations and inform students that a staff, member will visit the party. If a party is discovered in progress where the regulations are not being followed, the party will be termi nated. Parties in both fraternities and residence halls must also follow state laws, under which alcohol cannot be purchased, consumed, possessed or transported by any one under 21 years of age. Collegian Photo (Julia McCulloch Trade deficit: U.S. net debtor for first time since 1914 By MARTIN CRUTSINGER Associated Press Writer WASHINGTON, D.C. - The na tion’s broadest measure of foreign trade soared to a near-record $31.8 billion deficit from April through June, pushing the United States into the status of a net debtor for the first time in 71 years, the government said yesterday. Simply put, that means Americans now owe more to foreigners than foreigners owe to Americans, a posi tion the country has not been in since 1914. The Commerce Department report said the $31.8 billion deficit in the current account during the second quarter was 4.9 percent higher than the $30.3 billion current account defi cit incurred during the first three months of the year. The current account measures not only trade in merchandise but also in services, mainly investments flowing between the United States and other countries. The report showed that foreign assets in the United States grew by $39.5 billion during the first six months of the year while U.S. invest ment abroad was growing by only $3.2 billion. That would mean a deterioration in the country’s investment position of $36.3 billion during the first six months of the year enough to wipe out the $28.2 billion investment sur plus held by the United States as the year began By the end of the 1985, economists predict, the country could be in debt to foreigners by as much as $lOO billion, making the United States the world’s largest debtor country, sub stantially ahead of the previous lead ers, Brazil and Mexico. However, economists are split on how serious a threat this situation poses for the United States. Some economists say there is no parallel with debt-plagued devel oping countries because the Ameri can ' debt represents a smaller percentage of the overall U.S. econ omy, the biggest in the world. But other economists warn that, now that the United States has slipped into the status of net debtor, the debt is likely to grow at astro nomical levels in the coming years, Need for paramedics discussed By TOM SCHAFFNER Collegian Staff Writer The ongoing dilemma between expanding medical services and controlling health care costs has hit home in State College. About 30 emergency medical technicians from ambu lance services across Centre County gathered at Centre Community Hospital last week to discuss. starting an advanced life-support system that would bring full-time paramedics to the area. Dr. Thomas Bern, head of emergency services at the hospital, said a paramedic service would cost at least $250,000 to $300,000 and take up to two years to initiate in Centre County. Bern said if the hospital can find appropriate funding measures, the estimates would be practical. The mone tary estimate included only equipment and supplies, not the expenses for paramedics, he added. Paramedics are trained to administer advanced life support, which includes administering drugs and intrave nous fluids, reading electrocardiograms and praticing skills to keep airways open Under the current system, EMTs are trained to per form basic life support such as banadaging wounds, administering oxygen, immobilizing fractures and con trolling bleeding. Bern said a paramedic service has not been established in Centre County because its rural setting does not have a “hospital every five minutes.” Because Centre Community is the only hospital in the area, there is no competition to give the hospital an incentive to implement an ALS service, which would include the use of a paramedic unit, he said. Dr. David Lindstrom, director of the Office of Emer gency Medical Services at Ritenour Health Center, said it has been the priority of his office to provide the Universi ty with a constant advanced life-support system. Para medic service at the University is inconsistent because it is only available during home football games, the Arts Festival, Agricultural Progress Days and the Beta Sigma Beta-Sy Barash-Beta at Bald Eagle State Park, Linds trom said. Because the events draw large crowds, they are “clear ly high-risk events” that necessitate the hiring of ad vanced life services, he said. Other than the four events, fyi The University Park Airport Authority announced that the new airport parking lot will be closed Sept. 16 to Sept. 30 for paving and light installation. Cars may be parked in the lot next to the former terminal. Any car found in the new lot by 8 a.m. Sept. 23 will be towed at the owner’s expense. Tuesday, Sept. 17,1985 Vol. 86, No. 48 12 pages University Park, Pa. 16802 Published by students of The Pennsylvania State University ©1985 Collegian Inc. The Deficit For April-June 1985 Was $31.8 Billion $86.2 IMPORTS The current account, the nation's broadest measure of foreign trade, registered a near-record $31.8 billion deficit from April through June, confirming that the country has now become a net debtor for the first time in 71 years, the government reported yesterday. hitting the one estimate $1 trillion by 1990. The problem is that the United States for many years was able to rely on overseas investment earnings to cover its perennial merchandise trade deficits. Now, however, Uie country will be running a trade deficit and an investment deficit as dollars flow abroad to pay interest and divi dends to foreigners. This imbalance, some economists predicted, will result in belt-tighten ing by Americans as the country tries to cope with the foreign debt. “We are simply going to have to dilute our standard of living to pay off these debts,” said Roger Brinner, an economist with Data Resources Inc., advanced life services are only available in the emergen cy department at the hospital, Lindstrom said. Bern listed four criteria he would establish before beginning a paramedic system in the area. A paramedic service would: • Serve all of Centre County. • Be supervised by a Centre Community Hospital physician. • Have a long-term commitment from system opera- tors. . t , • Complement present EMT services, not replace them. Lindstrom said that before a paramedic service could be started in the area, all ambulance services, hospitals and local governments involved must approve the sys tem. “It’s going to cost money, but what is a human life worth?,” Lindstrom said. Permission from the Seven Mountains Emergency Medical Services Council and the state Department of Health must also be obtained, he said. Lindstrom added that besides New Castle, State College is the only area with a population more than 25,000 without a paramedic service. According to a 1981 Seattle Heart Watch Study, very few heart attack victims can be saved unless ALS is provided to them within eight to 10 minutes, he said. EMT Dan Baumgardner of the Emergency Medical Transfer Services of State College said paramedics have about 700 hours of training. EMTs have about 120 hours of training, Lindstrom said. U.S.Forelgn -n Trade Deficit In Billions of Dollars $53.2 EXPORTS Source: U.S. Commerce Department a Lexington, Mass., consulting firm. He and other economists blamed the soaring federal budget deficits for pushing up interest rates in this coun try and helping to lure foreign invest ment. “As long as we overload the finan cial markets with foreign debt, our interest rates are going to be higher than the rest of the world and higher than we can afford to pay,” Brinner said. “Eventually foreigners will decide they have enough dollars and the dollar will sink in value, but before that happens this outflow of dollars will feed on itself much as the federal debt does,” he said. The University’s ambulance service supplies assis tance to any student within a 10-mile radius of campus, any employee working at the University or anyone visiting campus or University property. Noreen Byers, co-owner of Handy Delivery Services, 901 E. College Ave., a taxi and delivery business, said her business is interested in beginning a paramedic service in the area. Byers said the service would cost about $250,000 to initiate and would serve no farther than Bellefonte, Skytop Mountain and Boalsburg. For the service to be successful, Byers said, Handy Delivery would need a guarantee from Centre Commu nity to receive no fewer than 2,000 runs per year. AP Laorpholo