News Briefs By The Associated Press Soviets purchase United States grain WASHINGTON D.C. Private exporters reported sales Monday of 100,000 metric tons of corn to the Soviet Union, the nation's first major purchase of U.S. grain since the failed coup last month, the Agriculture Department said. The corn is being purchased under $1.5 billion in credit guar antees authorized by President Bush in June. A metric ton is 2,205 pounds, about 36.7 bushels of wheat or 39.4 bushels of corn. The department said Monday's sales of "feed grains and protein concentrates" were worth $94.4 million. Protein concentrates usually means soybean products, but spokesman Roger Runningen said he had no details. Sales of wheat and corn for delivery to the Soviet Union for this year now total 9.3 million tons, of which wheat accounts for nearly 1.5 million tons and corn totals 7.8 million tons. In addition, sales of soybeans total 538,700 tons and soybean meal total 1.37 million tons. In authorizing the $1.5 billion in credit guarantees in June, Bush said $6OO million would be available immediately. An additional $5OO million was to become available Oct. 1, but Bush said after the coup that $315 of that would become available. The final $4OO million in credit guarantees is to become available Feb. 1, 1992. Anti-Communist dissident dies in Poland WARSAW, Poland Senator Jan Jozef Lipski, one of Poland's best-known anti-Communist dissidents and a founder of the his toric human rights group KOR, died yesterday of heart disease, the PAP news agency said. Lipski, a writer, political activist and a historian, died in a Krakow hospital at the age of 65. In 1976, with a group of 14 leading dissidents, Lipski founded the Workers' Defense Committee, known by its Polish initials KOR, to organize legal assistance for jailed workers after protests against food price hikes and to arrange financial help for the workers' families. KOR campaigned against human rights abuses and encouraged the development of opposition activities that led to the birth of Solidarity, the first free trade union in the East bloc. KOR was dissolved in 1981. Residents report drug suspects by mail PITTSBURGH Residents can report suspected drug dealers in the city by filling out a form and dropping it in the mail. City police have made eight arrests, since they started distrib uting the forms in July. Many of the forms have been mailed anonymously. The forms, available at local police- precincts, ask for names, addresses and descriptions of suspected drug dealers as well as information about their vehicles. About 65 forms have been mailed in, and more arrests are expected, said Assistant Police Chief Earl Buford, head of the narcotics squad. Some forms are vague and do not offer information linked to crime, but all are being saved. "All of these bits and pieces are put together and are parts of our investigation," he said. One neighborhood group is asking for 17,000 blank forms. Police may ask some utilities to distribute the forms. Tropical storm kills 29 in China BEIJING A tropical storm that lashed southern China over the weekend killed 29 people and seriously injured six, said an official report reaching Beijing yesterday. The Yatigcheng Evening News of Canton reported Monday that all the casualties occurred in Nanxiong County of Guangdong province. It also said 11 people were missing following the tropical storm that hit on Saturday and Sunday. The Guangdong Foreign Affairs Office, contacted by telephone from Beijing, refused yesterday to give updated information on the casualties. The newspaper said the tropical storm destroyed 1,550 houses, leaving 3,500 people homeless. In some areas, 13 inches of rain fell during a 24-hour period, the newspaper said. It also said heavy rains deluged two coal mines, but gave no details of any damage caused. Crack cocaine may have started ferry fire NEW YORK Fire marshals are investigating the possibility that homeless people smoking crack in the attic of the Staten Island Ferry terminal may have touched off the weekend fire that dev astated the Manhattan landmark. Investigators found dozens of empty crack vials in the area of Whitehall Terminal where the fire began, Chief Fire Marshal John Stickevers said yesterday. Investigators said the fire began in an 8-foot-high cockloft, the space between the ceiling and roof, and above the sprinkler sys tem. He said marshals have interviewed several homeless people known to frequent the terminal and some have admitted being up in the cockloft before or knowing of others who regularly used it. Asked if a spark from a crack pipe or butane lighter used to heat the drug could have set off the spectacular four-alarm fire, Stickevers said: "That is a possibility and we're looking into it." Report says French are getting friendlier PARIS The French, long reputed to turn a cold shoulder toward American tourists, have gotten friendlier over the past five years, according to a survey released yesterday. More than half of the 1,000 American tourists polled by Amer ican Express and Maison de la France, a French tourism group, said they got a warmer welcome than expected and detected a definite improvement since 1986. Only 14 percent said not speaking French caused insurmounta ble problems. The survey also gave a thumbnail sketch of the average Amer ican visitor to France: financially well-off, college-educated, from either the East or West coasts, over 45 and likely to be traveling without small children. Twenty percent of those surveyed earned more than $lOO,OOO annually. The fall of the dollar, among other factors, forced 50 percent to skip the once-popular, four-star luxury hotels in favor of middle range accommodations. Only 18 percent said they could still afford the top hotels. Baby delivered early to get heart surgery PITTSBURGH A baby diagnosed in the womb with a deadly heart ailment was delivered five weeks early so she could receive a transplanted heart, doctors said yesterday. Sarah. Kelton of Pittsburgh was in critical condition and breathing with the help of a respirator yesterday in the intensive care unit of Children's Hospital of Pittsburgh. She received the new heart in a six-hour operation that began shortly after 11 p.m. Sunday. "The child looks well," said John M. Armitage, one of two sur geons who performed the transplant. "We're pleased with her progress." Sarah is taking the experimental but highly praised drug M-506 to prevent rejection of her transplanted heart. She will be watched carefully, especially during the next critical week. Sarah was delivered by Cesarean section shortly before 2 p.m. Sunday at Allegheny General Hospital in Pittsburgh after doctors learned a newborn donor, who was not identified, had been found. Sarah weighed just over 5 pounds at birth. Sarah's parents, who have one other young child, asked doctors not to identify them so they can have privacy while they recu perate from the ordeal, said hospital spokeswoman Sue Cardillo. ''Nsk . CINEMA *ie WORLD $3.50 All shows until 6 p.m. JUNGLE FEVER R 7:20, 9:50 BILL & TED'S sown JOURNEY PG 7:45, 9:30 CHILD'S PLAY 3 R 8:00, 10:00 DOC HOLLYWOOD PG-13 7:35, 9:45 *THE DOCTOR PG-13 7:15, 9:40 *DEAD AGAIN R 7:30, 9:45 TERMINATOR 2 R 7:00, 9:45 HOT SHOTS PG-13 8:00, 10:00 Business and Econ Majors: PHI CHI THETA co-ed business fraternity Tuesday, Sept. 10 6:30 -8:00 p.m. Thursday, Sept. 12 8:30 -10:00 p.m. 204 HUB professional dress suggested North 237-1414 1100 N. Atherton P r sl OFF Il l t:ot Six Pack of Coke or Diet Coke any size pizza I when you purchase Not valid with any other I any size pizza. offer, coupon or special. I Not valid with any other expires: 9/15/91 I offer, coupon or special. I expires: 9/15/91 • -..pa-c-ng —, ~......,, o dilv , oft Prxes Orn , ef sa. 0 ' z. Vet aPa 5 .0 .....sorsbe= ams .01grersve . 2 . 7,4::"' N. T.,4" c=rs,„,=,: L. I :LI mon.= (~,,, cv,, —, -,:, $2O o rasa g, I ••i .4 ,-r-..‘ c.,,,1x. $2O CO Cash L 0......".. ~,......„....r. J. _ ot , vai. + as Owns are root penakred kr We ". a 4 . M.N., , 90 , Ckrtrosßezairc EXAM TOMORROW? Exam Packs Available for HDFS 414 SOC 313 MGMT 471 ASTRO 1.3 HIST 20 NIITANY NOTES • Daily Notes • Exam Pack • Semester Packet 238-0623 234 E. College Ave. 2nd Floor (Above Mid-State Bank) South 234-5655 421 E. Beaver The Daily Collegian Wednesday, Sept. 11, 1991-4