B—The Daily Collegian Wednesday, Aug. 27; 1986 Alcohol Continued from Page 1 • Adult graduate students and graduate-registered student organi zations may serve alcoholic bever ages to adults in facilities owned by the University only if no monetary charge is made for admission and the function is closed to the public. , • Adult students may possess and consume alcohol in their rooms or the rooms of other adults in the residence halls. Conduct, such as disorderly parties resulting from drinking that interferes with the rights of others is prohibited. • Students under 21 are prohibited from possessing or consuming alco holic beverages anywhere on the premises of the University, specif ically in their residence hall rooms. The policy also cuts the University ties to the greek system by reducing the requirements of thg IFC•and the Panhellenic Council to registering fraternities and sororities and enforc ing University regulations only if a violation occurs on-campus. If an alcohol-related accident oc curred at a fraternity, the University? wouldn't be held responsible since it didn't require the fraternity to en force rules. Several recommendations from a University alcohol study group last year that would require regulations on fraternity parties, such as a tap shut-off time, were scrapped because Unfinished Furniture Custom Cut Window Blind Plant Needs Pots, Soil and Sprayers Expert Key Cutting Electrical Gadgets Hotpots Cut Chain and Rope by the Foot School Supplies Paper Pencils, Pens, Pencil Sharpeners, Notebooks Plus Lightbulbs, Spray Paints, Carpet Tape and more The New Centre Hardware, Inc. • Notebooks & Pens • Art & Engineering Supplies the University might be held respon sible if it didn't enforce those regula tions. "The University has neither the authority nor the ability to supervise and regulate conduct that occurs off campus," Jordan said.. Conway said the IFC will be chang ing their own in-house regulations this Fall, but was unable to say what specific changes would be made. "We're meeting with our lawyers and trying to come up with something that will minimize our own liability," he said. He said the regulations aren't "going to loosen. We'll probably have to tighten the regulations." Conway said the IFC would be assigning a task force of fraternity presidents to develop the changes within the next few weeks. The new University policy also emphasizes education as a curb to alcohol abuse. The University will: • Refer students guilty of alcohol related violations for counseling. • Ask the Faculty Senate to devel op more courses on alcohol aware ness. • Give more funding to On Drugs Inc., a State College counseling cen ter. • Increase the number of non-alco holic campus social events. • Work with the community to control alcohol use and abuse. WELCOME BACK STUDENTS We Have Everything You Need to Make Your Place Your Home But the same good service! 221 S. Allen Street State College, Pa. 16801 Open 9to 6 p.m. Monday thru Friday Saturday Bto 5 p.m Established 1944 Customer Parking Freein Rear of. Store I .1, 11 4., " r i;t, -,!.5;: , Prr.c • !," >slk. p, ..1: 47 , 5t101, 0::44k .•••:.• . E !. v, • fAtsi, A: ~,,i ‘4.w.,0. .„.„,..N.„,..,.....„*„... , .. e ,: i v,.,„..„,.. ...... ~... ~ ... .v.) 4 4, 4 4 4 . N , ........, ..: .- . ...„.„,„ „vv.,,,,N • N- ", , t.l..ir i-vp.,..4.- , ..,.. %,:c,...,.:4, ..;•' , 1c..4.i..: . ' . . , 1 ., ... , .>,:..;." , 0 ,- .:: F) .u••• 1; 5e,f...;‘,..;:, fi,%:: :i' :::•••:,u4.0 • "-;:••. •,•,-.A.4a 4, • ...,. f;,-.t: .- ..V .., $,..,.A. ....= •• .. . ...„ •:'..';'? , ';. 4 ',. 1, , , i. , . .1.. -. • !. 7 .:. ...:•:fv, ..i....F. ~,,,... ...c,.)•• ....1:4?• '.i../- ' •:- 'iv. .flst: • Shorts it, others say they are dissatisfied like Each meal has its own point scale. Breakfast is 65 points, lunch is 130 and dinner 190. The computer, which reads the student's 1.D., keeps track of how many points the student has left after each meal. Other students said that the . new system is more complicated than the former plan and that the University administration should have kept the old system. "I think when you have a new plan, at the beginning, there's going to be some confusion," said Lanny Dillon, director of the Residence Hall Advisory Board. "If students would take five minutes to review the brochure, they may be less confused," he said. "The information is available to them." Eric Becher (freshman-aerospace) and Dave Olivo (freshman-architectural engineering) said the plan offers choices and is quick, simple and easy to understand. But Timothy Rogers (junior-liberal arts) said the new system allows only for the "sprucing up" of the dining hall. He said the new system is more complicated and more expensive than last year, since a student wanting to eat 21 meals'a week like last year would have to buy the most expensive plan under 'the new system, as well as additional points. Students can buy 1,000 points for $lO. "SUN .1 fIES 99 • BBQ Grills • Kodak Film • Batteries • Newspapers • Magazines "We were one of the only universities to get 21 meals per week," Rogers said. "They compli cated an easy system." But Dillon said it is obvious that students who fully used the 21-meal-per-week plan would be at a disadvantage because under this new system, they would pay more' than in the former plan for the same number of meals. Asked about the number of students who eat 21 meals a week, he said, "I don't think there are that many people." Another major complaint many students had was that although they have the option to eat anywhere on campus, some are not allowed to eat in West Halls and Centre Halls dining areas during the lunch hour. Dillon said to avoid congestion only students who are Centre and West Hall residents may eat lunch in their respective dining halls. "We're trying to avoid a mad rush because those dining halls are close to many classes," he said. Dillon said that these are the only restrictions under the new system and that they were nec essary to benefit the students who live in those areas. "I'm saving money," said Bilal Karriem (sophomore-physics). "I missed breakfast. I think it's pretty good." ( 6 -(1 E. College Ave. lesterki Parkwag 31147pping Center rniVersity Drive Bellaire Axle. A es; Cola. . iiii .. : . . , ~,„----:: state i nation i wo . , ili ,„ . ,:,,,:• ....:.. „.„,,f Report says evidence By ROBERT PARRY Associated PresS Writer WASHINGTON, D.C. The Reagan ad ministration, in a new report, acknowledges that some Nicaraguan rebels and supporters have engaged in drug trafficking, but insists that evidence is lacking against the chief U.S.-backed Contra group. "The available evidence points to involve ment with drug traffickers by a limited number of persons having various kinds of affiliations with or political sympathies for resistance groups," said the report sent to Congress by the State Department. Specifically, the report cites U.S. intelli gence information as saying "a senior mem ber of Eden Pastora's Sandino Revolutionary Front" in late 1984 agreed to help a Colombi an' narcotics trafficker ship drugs to the United States in exchange for an airplane, two helicopters and money. The report also notes other drug trafficking by people associated with the Contras, - but found no evidence that those activities were authorized by rebel leaders or that the main South African Zulu c:: id says civil war starts among blacks By DAVID CRARY Associated Press Writer JOHANNESBURG, South Africa —Mango suthu Buthelezi, the moderate Zulu chief, said yesterday the brutality of those who killed a supporter's wife shows that civil war has begun among South African blacks. In Cape Town, a regional council voted to integrate the last whites-only public beaches on the Cape Peninsula. Council member Neil Ross said: "God's own beaches should be for God's own people." The government said it will end on Wednes day the special inspections of cargo being transshipped from Zimbabwe and Zambia, which have caused long delays. It said the 3- week-long "statistical survey" had served its . ptirpose. Buthelezi, chief minister of the KwaZulu tribal homeland and one of the country's most powerful black moderates, issued a statement expressing shock at "the cold blooded murder" of Evelyn Sabelo, wife of KwaZulu legislator Winnington Sabelo. She was killed and her three children were seriously wounded in an attack on their home Friday night by assailants using a hand grenade and automatic rifle. "This indicates the lengths to which those who wish to make this country ungovernable wish to go in brutality and hideousness," Buthelezi said. "It is un-African for women and children to be targets in a war and I am concerned about the extent to which this kind of crime will brutalize those who are at the receiving end. The black civil war I warned about had now materialized." Buthelezi's opposition to political violence and economic sanctions has antagonized sup porters of the African National Congress guerrilla movement and other militant oppo nents of South Africa's white government. Cape Divisional Council members voted 11- Proposed exorci WEST PITTSTON (AP) A self-proclaimed demonologist said yesterday he has arranged for a long awaited exorcism at a century-old house reportedly filled with foul smelling, violent demons. But an owner of the house said she knew nothing about the exorcism, and a spokesman for the Roman Catholic Diocese of Scranton also expressed surprise, saying the di ocese has not even decided if an exorcism is appropriate. Edward Warren, director of the New England Society for Psychic Research of Monroe, Conn., said two priests agreed Monday night to help Janet and Jack Smurl, who say their house has been infested with demons for 18 months. The priests will perform the exor cism within two weeks, Warren said. Plea bargain nets info in drug ring case By DAVE MORRIS Associated Press Writer SCRANTON A New York man agreed yester day to testify against his associates after admit ting he participated in a drug ring that smuggled more than 7 tons of cocaine into the United States. Michael Phillippo pleaded guilty to the charge in a brief appearance before U.S. District Judge Richard Conaboy. Phillippo, a former manager of a county club in Westchester County, N.Y., will be sentenced Oct. 3, the judge said after the plea agreement was read by Assistant U.S. Attorney Gordon Zubrod. On seven occasions from July to September 1984, Phillippo helped pilots unload cocaine from Co lombia, Zubrod said. Phillippo did the work at the request of another defendant, John Robertson 111, according to Zubroa. U.S.-backed rebel group, the United Nicara guan Opposition, UNO, profited from drug smuggling. Last December, The Associated Press, quoting U.S. investigators and American volunteers who worked with the rebels, re ported that Nicaraguan rebels operating in northern Costa Rica engaged in cocaine traf ficking to help finance their war against Nicaragua's leftist Sandinista government. The AP said the smuggling operations included refueling planes at clandestine rebel airstrips and helping transport cocaine to other Costa Rican points for shipment to the United States. The AP also cited a U.S. intelligence report that said a Pastora com mander used cocaine profits to buy military equipment. At the time, however, State Department deputy spokesman Charles Redman said, "we are not aware of any evidence to support those charges." Although the new administration report accepts the validity of some accusations, it is accompanied by a cover letter signed by State Department lobbyist J. Edward Fox, 3 to open all beaches under its jurisdiction to all races. It oversees 20 beaches stretching along 70 miles of coastline, mostly in rural areas away from cities and towns. The city of Cape Town integrated its beaches last year. Action by the divisional council means all public beaches on the peninsula now are open. Ross, who represents the opposition Pro gressive Federal Party, said in debate that the council risked being viewed as "the last bastion of apartheid" in the region if it kept the beaches segregated. The government's Bureau for Information released more details yesterday about a confrontation Monday between policemen and a crowd of about 500 blacks at a high school in Soweto, Johannesburg's huge black township. It said a 22-year-old black man was killed and eight blacks were wounded when four plainclothes detectives fired birdshot to dis perse youths throwing stones at their car. The bureau said five wounded blacks, rang ing in age from 14 to 25, were hospitalized in fair condition. Bureau spokesmen reported one other death from unrest, a black man found burned to death Monday in the Zwide township out side Port Elizabeth. More than 255 people, almost all of them black, have died in unrest since a nationwide state of emergency was declared June 12. About the border checks, a Foreign Min istry statement said:. "The information gath ered since the 4th of August is considered to be sufficient for the present." It said the exact reason for the inspections was confi dential. They began after Zambia and Zimbabwe agreed at a summit of seven Commonwealth nations in London to impose strong economic sanctions against South Africa. Only Britain refused. Unlike a priek in two previous exor cisms, Warren said, the team will bless both apartments in the duplex to leave the spirits no refuge in the building. Janet Smurl said she knew nothing about Warren's announcement. "I think I will call Mr. Warren and talk to him," she said. "I've heard a few things today. To me it's only hearsay." Warren said the Smurls were told about the exorcism Monday night but apparently were told not to discuss it. "The church wants to keep it a secret," he said. The plans were a secret to the Roman Catholic Diocese of Scranton, according to Maria Orzel, the di ocese's executive director of commu nications. "We are not aware of any exorcism According to the indictment, the smuggling flights were made from the Wilkes-Barre-Scran ton International Airport, the base for Air Ameri ca Inc., a company owned by Luytjes. Robertson is one of 12 people indicted earlier this month in what acting U.S. Attorney James West called the largest known cocaine ring in the country. The ring, which started in 1980, made at least $25 million in profit, federal officials said. According to the plea agreement, Phillippo drove the cocaine to an undisclosed site in Luzerne County. There, Zubrod told the court, the cocaine was taken to a safe house by another man, who held it until the Colombians came to distribute it. Zubrod also said Phillippo built a secret storage area in his North Tarrytown, N.Y., house to store money for Robertson. At one point, he said, as s cans that is planned," she said. "Our in- occult explanation for normal occur vestigation continues. ... We will act rences, he said. cautiously and appropriately." Kurtz also criticized Warren, say- Meanwhile, the director of a group ing for years the demonologist has that tries to debunk tales of the par- contended "there are ghosts all over anormal said the case was a charade, the place." He also said Warren in fueled by the pranks of the Smurls' • sisted ghosts haunted a house in Ami -17-year-old daughter, Dawn. tyville, N.Y., in a famous case, while Paul Kurtz, director of the Commit- the family's neighbors and lawyer tee for the Scientific Investigation of later said the family fabricated parts Claims of the Paranormal in Buffalo, 'of the story. N.Y., said he has no specific evidence Kurtz said he concluded the against the girl but said cases of so- Smurls' case was a fraud when War called hauntings typically involve ren refused to let his investigators see "rambunctious teen-agers." videotapes purportedly showing the He said discrepancies in the stories demons or to go into the Smurls' she tells reporters undercut her cred- house Monday, although they had ibility, and stories by the grandmoth- been invited. er, Mary Smurl, betray the family's Warren said he barred the way "gullibility and hysteria" after one investigator misrepre- The family has become so appre- sented himself as a University of hensive that members have sought an Pittsburgh faculty member. of Contra drug dealing is lacking stating "the administration believes these (Contra drug) allegations are false." Fox's office said yesterday he was on vacation and Unavailable to comment on the apparent discrepancies between his letter and the new report. Asked for comment, Redman said he was not familiar with the new report, a copy of which was obtained by The AP this week. Fox's letter is dated July 24, and congres sional sources said the, report was distributed on Capitol Hill in response to inquiries about alleged Contra drug trafficking, which had undercut support for President Reagan's request for $lOO million in new aid for the rebels. Reagan's aid package won Senate approval on Aug. 13 after earlier clearing the House. The military and logistical assistance is expected to begin flowing to the Contras next month. The report, entitled "Allegations of Drug Trafficking and the Nicaraguan Democratic Resistance," is the administration's most detailed reaction to the drug charges to date. In April, an administration report cited ng confus much as $9 million was hidden at the house When agents arrested Phillippo on Aug. 8, he showed the hidden cash to federal agents who confiscated more than $3 million, Zubrod said. Phillippo agreed with Zubrod's account of his crimes, but otherwise remained silent during the hearing. Another member of the ring, Frederick Luytjes, 38, pleaded guilty Monday and also is cooperating with the government, West said. The first six flights from Scranton took money to Colombia and returned to Florida with cocaine, the indictment states. Sixteen additional flights brought cocaine to Pennsylvania and several other shipments landed in New York state, West said. As part of his plea agreement, Luytjes agreed to surrender Air America, its planes and other assets worth about $8 million to the government. "evidence of a limited number of incidents in which known drug traffickers have tried to establish connections with Nicaraguan resis tance groups," but it provided no details. Asked about the new report, Sen. John Kerry, D-Mass., a Contra aid opponent, said, "the State Department memo raises far more questions than it answers about allega tions of Contra-related narcotics trafficking. Blanket statements by the administration that the allegations are false do little to.help Congress determine whether the Contras are smuggling cocaine and heroin into the United States." Pressed by Kerry, who has conducted a staff investigation of the drug charges, the Senate Foreign Relations Committee has requested the administration's investigative files on the allegations. The new administration report says, "there has been no evidence that organizations asso ciated with the major resistance umbrella group (UNO) have participated in or bene fitted from drug trafficking." But the report adds, "there are some 20,000 members of the several active armed groups lon Timing of LCz's sale irks state store union By ROD SNYDER Associated Press Writer HARRISBURG Criticism of a 20 percent off sale in state stores on the heavily traveled Labor Day weekend won't stop the Liquor Control Board from having future discount days, an LCB spokesman says. LCB spokesman Bob Ford said this week there is no proof the sales encourage alcohol abuse and said the board would likely ap 7 prove other sales, including one before the Christmas holiday. Ford's comments came in re sponse to criticism of the sale by the head of a union representing state store workers. Ed Cloonan, president of the Independent State Store Union, said the discount days have no place in the state liquor,monopoly and that the board had especially poor timing in scheduling the lat est discount day for the Labor Day weekend. The 20 percent sale is set for Saturday. "With federal concerns over drug use in society and the nation al concern over drunk driving particularly on holiday weekends, it seems incongruous for the big gest control state to ballyhoo a 20 percent discount alcohol sale on the last driving summer holiday weekend," Cloonan said in the letter to the legislative commit tees. ' Ford countered, "Just because you have a sale, to think people The Daily Collegian Wednesday, Aug. 27, 1986 in the Nicaraguan democratic resistance. In such a large cross section, it is inevitable that there will be some who have had drug connec tions themselves or have associated with others who have been involved in drug activ ities." The report then recounts several sets of allegations linking the Contras to drug traf ficking. One, involving an unidentified "senior member" of Pastora's Sandino Revolution ary Front, FRS, allegedly allowed the cash starved army to obtain a C-47 aircraft, two helicopters and $lOO,OOO along with a commit ment of "$200,000 a month once the narcotics shipments began. "Only one incident of drug trafficking is known to have resulted from this agreement. A FRS pilot, Gerardo Duran, was arrested in January 1906 in Costa Rica for alleged in volvement in transporting cocaine to the United States." Pastora, who this spring abandoned his fight against the Nicaraguan government, has denied the accusations against his group are going to run around and get drunk . . . there is just no proof of that. It's just simply not valid. "People just take the opportuni ty to purchase it to consume at another time," he said, adding more-expensive items sell better during the sales because custom ers can save more money. Cloonan said the LCB's discount days are held to entice customers to buy more alcohol, which he said is in conflict with the board's duty of controlling liquor. Cloonan called on the House Liquor Control Committee and the Senate Law and Justice Commit tee to investigate whether the . LCB "is now promoting the sale of alcohol, when their legislative mandate is to control it." "It is not cola, VCHs or potato chips that we are merchandising," Cloonan said in the letter. "Our goal is to be the responsible con duit of the product that is the country's most-abused drug." In June, a two-day, 20 percent sale generated about $19.4 million in revenues. During the same peri od last year, when no sale was in effect, the state store system gen erated about $5.8 million in reve nues. Neither House Liquor Control Committee Chairman Eugene Sa loom, D-Westmoreland, nor Sen. John Shumaker, R-Dauphin, chairman of the Senate Law and Justice Committee, could be reached for comment on the union's letter.