6—The Daily Collegian Friday, April 17, 1987 state/nation/world Engineer testifes Says NASA budget for safety diverted .13y JIM ROWLEY Associated Press Writer 'WASHINGTON, D.C. (AP) One of the Morton ;Thiokol engineers who tried to stop the fatal launch of the space shuttle Challenger claims the company received money from NASA to hire 18 quality control and safety people but "the money was used instead as a slush fund for Thiokol." Engineer Roger Boisjoly said also, in a paper filed with U.S. District Court, that his warning in July 1985 of possibly catastrophic failure of seals on the shuttle booster rockets was immediately classified as "company private" by Thiokol and withheld from the National Aeronautics and Space Administration. i Weekend Lunch II Small 1-item pizza g and 2 Pepsis for $5.00 PhD PIZZA CALL 234-4Phd EXPIRES APRIL 21, 1987 1 COUPON PER PIZZA Good with orders placed before 3 pm I OUR DRIVERS CARRY LESS THAN WE RESERVE THE RIGHT TO LIMIT OUR DELIVERY AREA CUSTOMER PAYS ALL SALES TAX On th e At r i um - • . Open l ot t unch WE ACCEPT . 301 S. Allen11:00 AM - 'Da - 1y • DOMINOS' COUPONS . -., • , Oct. 8, 1920: The Penn State community prepared for its first Alumni Day celebration. The football game with Dartmouth would be the "greatest in the East." The Penn State Collegian listed a full schedule of activities for Homecoming. Read all about it. April 3, 1925: Fearing the spread of influenza, Dr. J.P. Ritenour issued a list of nine "don'ts" for students. Such modern medical advice included: "Don't fail to keep your feet dry and warm; Don't fail to sneeze and cough into your handkerchief; Don't be irregular in your habits." Read all about it. 4 Free Pepsis diet Pepsis or Mt. Dews with any Large 2-item Pizza PhD PIZZA CALL 234-4Phd EXPIRES APRIL 24, 1987 1 COUPON PER ORDER OUR DRIVERS CARRY LESS THAN $2O WE RESERVE THE RIGHT TO LIMIT OUR DELIVERY AREA CUSTOMER PAYS ALL SALES TAX Read all about it. The Challenger exploded on Jan. 28, 1986 after 73 seconds of flight, killing the crew of seven. The Rogers Commission that investigated the disaster found it was caused by a leak of hot gases stream ing from the ship's right booster rocket. Boisjoly is suing the company on his own behalf and on behalf of the taxpayers. He accuses Morton Thiokol the sole manufacturer of booster rock ets for the space 'shuttle of fraud by falsely certifying the safety of the rubberlike 0-ring seals' at places where rocket booster segments are joined. Efforts to reach company officials by telephone for comment were not immediately successful. The firm said also that it "will explore all legal means to redress any damage to its reputation" Read all about it in Centennial Magazine. Centennial Magazine is 100 pages from the last century of student newspapers. News, issues and opinions, sports, women, Collegian history, humor and ad reprints are all included in this commemorative publication. Centennial Magazine is available at the Collegian office in 126 Carnegie Building. You can also find it at several retail outlets in the State College area. Centennial Magazine The news of the century. in shuttle $l.OO OFF any Large 1-item Pizza PhD PIZZA A PurswUJ Ham Dolivond Plus Loo CALL 234-4Phd EXPIRES APRIL 24, 1987 1 COUPON PER PIZZA OUR DRIVERS CARRY LESS THAN $2O WE RESERVE THE RIGHT TO LIMIT OUR DELIVERY AREA CUSTOMER PAYS ALL SALES TAX C•i 1987 Collegian Inc disaster 'slush fund' into stemming from Boisjoly's charges. The engineer's charges were contained in a paper that had been held under seal by U.S. District Judge Harold Greene since it was filed . on April 2. The government had requested the docu ment be withheld from the public so that Morton Thiokol would not know that the FBI had begun a criminal investigation of the company. During a conference between the government and Greene on March 11, also under seal until Thursday, Justice Department lawyer David W. Long said employees of Thiokol had gone to the FBI with "substantial allegations of fraud." The FBI began a criminal investigation of Mor ton Thiokol after the allegations were made to agents in Salt Lake City on Jan. 17. FCC tightens obscenity laws WASHINGTON, D.C. (AP) The Federal Communications Commis sion yesterday asked the Justice De partment to consider prosecuting a California radio station for broad casting an allegedly obscene pro gram and issued warnings to two other stations including one airing controversial morning -show person ality Howard Stern. The actions put radio stations across the country on notice that the FCC will be imposing a stricter stan dard for adherence to laws prohibit ing the broadcast of indecent or obscene material over the airwaves. The FCC vote took aim at areas of broadcasting formerly considered safe harbor by radio programmers —, programs aired after 10 p.m. and material that merely avoids repeated use of obscene words. The five-member commission agreed that material broadcast by Pacifica. Foundation Inc.'s KPFK FM, Los Angeles, containing graphic depictions of sex acts was indecent "and may have crossed the line" to obscenity. The commission voted to refer that case to the Justice Depart ment for possible prosecution. Inquirer cops three Pulitzers for 1987 By JERRY SCHWARTZ Associated Press Writer NEW YORK The Philadel phia Inquirer won three 1987 Pulit zer Prizes yesterday, including two for investigative reporting, and The New York Times and the Los Angeles Times also captured two of the 6restigious awards. The Pittsburgh Press won the public service award for its reve lation of the inadequacy of the Federal Aviation Administration's medical screening of airline pilots. The work by Matthew Brelis and Andrew Schneider led to signifi cant reforms. Schneider also shared the 1986 award for special ized reporting. The Inquirer's John Woesten diek won a Pulitzer for his prison reporting, including an account proving the innocence of a man convicted of murder. Woesten diek, who had been one of three finalists in the general news re porting category, was given the investigative reporting award. A second investigative award went to Daniel R. Biddle, H.G. Bissinger and Fredrick N. Tulsky of the Inquirer for their series "Disorder in the Court," involving scandals in the Philadelphia court system. The stories led to federal and state investigations. The Pulitzer Prize for feature writing was awarded to Steve Twomey of The Philadelphia In quirer for a profile of life aboard an aircraft carrier. The Inquirer newsroom burst into cheers and applause as the official announcements came. Sam McKeel, publisher of the In quirer, called it "a great day, a great year and the continuation of a great trend." The specialized reporting prize to Alex S. Jones of The New York Times was for "The, Fall of the House of Bingham," which was described as "a skillful and sensi tive report of a powerful newspa per family's bickering and how it led to the sale of a famed media empire." The Binghams' owned The Louisville Courier-Journal and The Louisville Times. The Times' other Pulitzer was for national reporting and went to its staff for its coverage of the aftermath of the explosion of the space shuttle Challenger, includ ing "stories that identified serious flaws in the shuttle's design and in the administration of America's space program." "This place has been popping for the last half hour," said Max Frankel, executive editor of The New York Times. "We're excited, we're exuberant, we're proud as can be." The other national reporting prize went to the Miami Herald staff for its coverage of the Iran- Contra scandal. The explanatory journalism award went to Jeff Lyon and Peter Gorner of the Chicago Tribune for a series on gene therapy. The prize for general news re porting was awarded to the Akron Beacon Journal staff for its cover age of the attempted takeover of Goodyear Tire and Rubber Co. by a European financier. The international award went to Michael Parks of the Los Angeles Times for his coverage of South Africa. "South Africa is one of the more difficult countries to cover, given the present restriction on the press," said Alvin Shuster, foreign editor of the Times. "Parks is a true professional and has provided our readers with unique insight into that society," Shuster said. state news briefs Dwyer' widow seeks House seat HARRISBURG (AP) The widow of state Treasurer R. Budd Dwyer will return to western Pennsylvania and run for a state House seat, according to a report published yesterday. The Philadelphia Daily News reported that Joanne Dwyer, 47, of Hershey, would move home to Meadville, Crawford County, and seek the seat held by Connie G. Maine, a first-term Democrat. Reached at home yesterday afternoon, Dwyer declined to discuss the report. "I have no comment right now," she said, adding she didn't have time to answer questions, Man charged in daughter's death ERIE, Pa.' (AP) Police in Erie filed criminal charges yester day against a 33-year-old city man who allegedly left his infant daughter locked in their second-floor apartment, where she died in a fire. Magistrate Kay Pohl arraigned William King on charges of involuntary manslaughter, reckless endangerment and endanger ing the welfare of a child. She ordered King jailed in lieu of $25,000 cash bond. A complaint filed by Erie police Det. David. Bradley says King left his daughter, Marietha King, 6 months, and Taywan Beason, 3, April 7 in the apartment they shared with the children's mother. The fire killed the girl. The boy was rescued by passers-by. King was found in a tavern, and the only exit from the apartment was locked, police said, Program simulates acid rain cycle STATE COLLEGE (AP) A new computer simulation program developed for the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency could allow scientists to track acid rain from smokestack to lake and give policy-makers more information for setting emission-control stan dards, project researchers say. The Acid Deposition Modeling Project is a $5 million research effort, which began in June 1983, by the National Center for Atmospheric Research in Boulder, Colo., and Penn State Universi ty. Federal environmental researchers are already working with a prototype of the project, and should begin full testing on a more comprehensive model later this year, said Julius Chang, director of the EPA-funded project at the private research center in Colorado. nation news briefs Hinckley denied leave from hospital WASHINGTON, D.C. (AP) Presidential assailant John W. Hinckley Jr. lost his chance to leave a mental hospital unescorted to spend Easter Sunday with his parents following an uproar over revelations that he corresponded last year with triple-murderer Theodore Bundy. St. Elizabeths Hospital withdrew its request for a 12-hour pass for Hinckley, who was committed to the mental hospital after his 1981 attempt to assassinate President Reagan. The hospital said it wanted to take a detailed look at documents taken from Hinckley's room "to assess the clinical significance of writings and other materials belonging to Mr. Hinckley which were heretofore unexamined by the hospital staff." Cancer ranking scale developed WASHINGTON, D.C. (AP) Scientiks have developed a scale for ranking the potential hazard to humans of natural and man made chemicals that cause cancer in animals, a measure they say takes into account real-life exposure to the substances. Researchers at the University of California, in Berkeley, said yesterday that their system which, for example, rates a daily glass of beer as a greater cancer hazard than some pesticide pollution is designed to help people assess the dangers of the many carcinogens they hear about. Ames, with Renae MaGaw and Lois Swirsky Gold of the universi ty's Lawrence Berkeley Laboratory, said their scale rates possible cancer hazards to people based upon the known potency of a substance in animals and the likely human exposure over a lifetime, FCC votes to up phone line charges WASHINGTON, D.C. (AP) The Federal Communications Commission voted yesterday to increase the monthly line charge paid by residential telephone subscribers by $1.50 over the next two years, beginning with a 60-cent boost in July. The increase which sets the charge at $3.50 by April 1989 won unanimous support of the five-member commission as a way to further reduce long-distance rates and discourage large business users from leaving the public phone network to build their own networks. world news brie s Tutu defies speech restrition JOHANNESBURG, South Africa (AP) Archbishop Desmond Tutu and 46 fellow Anglican clergymen today defied new restric tions on anti-apartheid actions and appealed to President P.W. Botha to free detainees or bring them to trial. Meanwhile, a judge today set an April 28 hearing on a challenge to some of the restrictions. Emergency regulations imposed by police last weekend prohibit organized appeals or campaigns to release detainees. "With respect sir, we believe the valid response that law-abiding citizens should make to these regulations is openly to disobey them as we are doing now," the clergymen said in an open letter to Botha. "We do so deliberately and consciously, out of Christian conscience." • S. African court overules police ban CAPE TOWN, South Africa (AP) A court overturned a police ban on an anti-apartheid meeting shortly before it was scheduled to start, and the Rev; Allan Boesak went ahead with a speech denouncing tightened restrictions on dissent. "This government is a danger to this country," Boesak said. "We do not let dangerous people run around the streets. . . . Why do we let criminals into Parliament to do what they want?" The meeting Wednesday night was sponsored by the United Democratic Front and attended by about 650 people at Cape Town's city 'hall. It had been banned by the regional police commissioner as a potential threat to public safety. The ban was overturned by a three-judge panel of the Cape . Town Supreme Court following an appeal by the United Democratic Front, the country's largest anti apartheid coalition. Rev. Moon assaulted in S. Korea SEOUL, South Korea (AP) A close confidant of Unification Church leader the Rev. Sun Myung Moon was pelted with stones and eggs at a university yesterday by students who called him a "pro-American flunky," witnesses said. The witnesses, who spoke on condition of anonymity, said Park 80-hi was unhurt but at least one of his bodyguards was injured. A young man took off his jacket and put it over Park's head, and Park was escorted out an hour later. Park, a retired army lieutenant colonel, was to have spoken at the privately run Korea University on "Korean Unification." "We don't like the Unification Church because it is close to the government," one student said. MEYER DAIRY STORE & ICE CREAM PARLOR Homemade Ice Cream & Our Own Farm Fresh Milk & Eggs OPEN 9-11 doily 2390 5. Atherton St—Just Past Hills Plaza HAVING PROBLEMS AFFORDING COLLEGE, VOCATIONAL, OR TECHNICAL SCHOOL?... WE ARE THE SOLUTION!!! Using computers, we can find 5 to 25 sources of financial aid geared specifically to you! RESULTS . . . GUARANTEED! For free information write: Scholarship Research Institute P.O. Box 100 Ashville, PA 16613.0100 TEES FOR TWO! ONLY At the Book Swap 110 S. Fraser St. Mon-Sat 10 a.m.-7 p.m. The Daily Collegian Friday, April 17, 1987