The daily collegian. (University Park, Pa.) 1940-current, October 23, 1978, Image 17

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Dog day afternoon
M A liulldog gets , cradled by its proud owner during Sunday afternoon's dog show
at Beaver Stadium fields, sponsored by the American and Nittany K6nnel Clubs
Iranian demonsirators fired on
TEHRAN; Iran (UPI) Troops fired
on an estimated • 4,000 anti-government
Aie mons tra t or§ yesterday during the
second day of rioting in the city of
Hamedan, killing 'at least two and
wounding five others, an Iranian
government spokesman said.
The spokesman gave the figure when
,asked to comment on unconfirmed
r)pportS that 10 persons had been killed in
‘ Hp . tedatt, lie said official reports on
311
CINEMETIE E 3 THEATRES
TODAY 7:16, 9:oe — -
Wed. 2:45, 5:00, 7:1t,9:3 . 0'
NATIONAL
LAMPOON's
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Wed.
$1.25 at 2:45 11114111111 M
I II
TODAY 7:30, 9:45
WED $1.25 at 3:00 p.m
Woody Allen's
Rated PG
7:30 & 9:30
$1 Thurs 2:30, $2 Sun. 2:30
•
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~. ....; M OVIES I
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. ' PEAVE.ROARNER'• • • . '
ACADEMY AWARD
WINNER
MADAME
ROSA
© Atlantic Itch:114111g( ()monition PG
7:30 & 9:30 ,
$1 FRI 2:30, $2 SUN 2:30
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Photo by Ka
casualties were incomplete and a full
account was expected early today.
It was the second straight day of anti
government disturbances.
Environmental Resource
Management Club
presents
, • . , .
. .
IYlike Opdek
• i from PSU Deer Pens
,
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Presentation on Whitetail Deer
Tues., Oct. 24, 7:30 p.m.
301 Ag. Admin. Bldg.
UNIIVERSIITSI
TIHICATRI
Plesents •
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Fighting
LUSAKA, Zambia (UPI) Rhodesian
guerrilla leader Joshua Nkomo
yesterday said fighting in Zambia
against invading Salisbury troops has
died down and charged "those savages
have come here to wipe out children."
Nkomo also said the Rhodesians were
keeping at least six helicopters in
Zambian soil as late as yesterday and
denied Salisbury claims of 1,500 dead in
three days of bloody air and ground
strikes that began Thursday.
In Washington, the State Department
said it continued "to deplore the intense
fghting now taking place in and outside
of Rhodesia."
"The escalating violence deepens our
concern about future developments in
the area and reinforces the need for
progress toward a negotiated settlement
Rhodesia seizes Zambia airways
SALISBURY, Rhodesia (UPI) Rhodesia said
yesterday it seized control of Zambian air traffic at the
start of its anti-guerrilla raids last week.
To prove it, The Rhodesian Broadcasting Corporation
treated the public to a broadcast of radio traffic bet
ween Rhodesian war planes and the control tower in the
Zambian capital of Lusaka.
The exchanges were conducted Thursday when
Rhodesian bombers pounded what the military comand
called a black Rhodesian guerrilla base 12 miles north
of Lusaka.
" Rhodesia has no quarrel with Zambia or her
security forces. We therefore ask you not to intervene
or oppose our attack. However, we are orbiting your
airfields at this time and we are under orders to shoot
down any Zambian air force aircraft which does not
Navy divers find body
REEDVILIE, Va. (UPI) A team of
Navy and Coast Guard divers recovered
one body yesterday near the sunken
Coast Guard cutter Cuyahoga in their
search for the 11 crewmen presumed
drowned in a collision with an Argentine
coal freighter.
The victim's identity was not im
mediately known. .
UNIVERSITY CALENDAR
First day for signing winter term NDSL and University Long Term Loans,
. „.
Room 108 Shield's.
Last date for November graduates to deliver theses to Graduate School Office.
Last date for Departments to certify to Graduate School completion of required
papers for November graduates. '
Last date for November graduates to order cap, gown and hood locally.
France-Cinema, L'Atalante and La Soufriere, two complete showings, 7 and 9
p.m., Room 112 Kern.
Sigma Delta Epsilon Lecture. Thomas F. Massaro, nutrition, on "Malnutrition
in the Neonatal Environment: Behavior Consequences," 8 p.m., Room 101
Kern.
June Miller, organ, 8:30 p.m., Music Bldg. Recital Hall.
Meetings:
Alpha Phi Omega, 7 p.m., Room 106 Boucke.
ARHS, 7 p.m., Room 306 Boucke.
HOPS, 7 p.m., Room 316 Boucke.
Inter-Varsity Christian Fellowship, 7 p.m., Eisenhower Lounge.
Pa. Legal Society, 7 p.m., Room 165 Willard.
Rehab Education Organization, 7 p.m., Room 102 Chambers. •
Folklore Society, 7:30 p.m., Room 119 Boucke.
Science Fiction Society, 7:30 p.m., Room 174 Willard. - ' .
YMCA, class in aerobics, 7:30 p.m., Room 317 Boucke.
HEAVY DATE
Appointment With The Future
For Engineering Grads
Engineering opportunities exist at Hughes Aircraft Company, Culver
City, California, in its Electro-Optical & Data Systems Groups, for
graduates with the following degrees:
The positions involve the development of advanced electro-optic and
space sensor systems, laser systems, and airborne computers and
software. Opportunities are available in the following specialized areas:
Positions are also available for BS graduates on our Masters Fellowship
Work-Study and our Engineering Rotation Programs. For details, in
terested graduates are requested to schedule interview appointments
with our recruiter. Your placement office will schedule you for our
recruiting visit on Wednesday, November 8, 1978.
I I
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L -1
HUGHES AIRCRAFT COMPANY
U S. Citizenship required • Equal opportunity M/F/HC employer
Coast Guard officials conceded
privately it may take days to find all the
bodies, since many may have been
swept far away from the site of the
accident Friday night in Chesapeake
Bay at the mouth of the Potomac River.
"The current in that area runs at more
than two knots," said a chief petty of
ficer at the bayside town of St. Inigoes.
Monday, October 23
SPECIAL EVENTS
• BS in EE, Comp Sci, ME
• MS in EE, Comp Sci, ME
• PhD in EE
Analog & Digital Circuit Design
Hybrid Circuit Design
Systems Analysis
Systems Engineering
Signature Technology
Pattern Recognition
Image & Information Processing
Computer Architecture
Scientific Programming
E.O. Sensor Design
Optical Systems Design
Signal Processing Circuit Design
Structural Dynamic Analysis
Mechanical Product Design
Servo Design
1
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HUGHES
in Zambia is slacking off
of the Rhodesia problem," a
spokeswoman said.
Nkomo refused comment on official
Radio Zambia reports that Zambian
troops had joined the guerrillas in
fighting the Rhodesian troops, saying
only, "The Zambians are the defenders
of this country."
Since the radio announcement
Saturday that Zambian forces were
involved in the fighting, the radio has
dropped references to the conflict and is
virtually ignoring the issue.
Nkomo heatedly denied a Rhodesian
military communique that estimated
more than 1,500 persons were killed in
the strikes against more than a dozen
guerrilla camps in Zambia and
Mozambique.
"Fifteen hundred my foot. Those
comply with this request and attempts to take off.
"Did you copy all that?" the pilot asked. When
Lusaka control tower replied in the affirmative, the
officer said: "Roger. Thanks. Cheers."
At one point, the controller asked "Green leader" for
permission to have two civilian aircraft take off and a
Kenya Airways plane to land. "Green leader" asked for
everything to remain still for a while.
Then, "Green leader" headed back home and handed
control of Zambia's air traffic to "Dolphin Three,"
which asked the tower to keep civilian aircraft on the
ground another 10 minutes. •
Rhodesia radio said the Kenyan airlines captain, not
knowing why he was being held up, asked impatiently:
"Who has priority here, anyway?"
"I think the Rhodesians do at this time," the con-
savages have come here to wipe out
children. Why can't they admit it?" the
burly 61-year-old co-leader of the
guerrillas' Patriotic Front said.
"The fighting has died down. There
are still six (Rhodesian) helicopters
there. They are licking their wounds. If
they want to come again they will get
it," Nkomo said.
Nkomo said his own count of guerrilla
casualties was 95 injured and 192
"missing" fom the Mkushi camp, near
Zambia's northern border with Zaire. An
American reporter flown into Mkushi by
Rhodesia counted some 50 bodies at the
camp.
The guerrilla leader also said his men
shot down nine aircraft and inflicted
"heavy casualties" in intense fighting.
Rhodesia has said only one of its soldiers
in cutter wreckage
Still, there was a stubborn reluctance
among the searchers to admit that no
one' was left alive in or near the
wreckage of the 50-year-old Cuyahoga,
once a proud member of the Coast Guard
fleet but lately used only for training.
"Don't say that," a boat coxswain
snapped at an observer who speculated
the search might proceed at a more
Concerned consumers read Collegian ads. Right?
The Daily Collegian Monday, Oct. 23, 1978-
was killed and one helicopter crashed
"over difficult terrain."
Nkomo, who said the Mkushi camp
had held 1,601 girls and 32 men, showed
reporters two black girls who said they
had survived the Rhodesian air and land
attack Thursday.
One girl, in her mid-teens, had her left
foot bandaged and said she had been
"burned by napalm."
"I was hiding behind a tree" when the
attack began, she said. "I ran and there
was no where to go where there was
nothing burning."
The girl said weaponry at the camp
was limited to 42 semi-automatic rifles,
one light machine gun, two rocket
propelled grenade launchers, bazookas
and five Soviet-made AK-47 assault
rifles.
troller replied.
In eastern Rhodesia, guerrillas Friday night blasted
a railroad bridge at Tsungwizi, disrupting rail traffic
between Salisbury and the border city of Umtali,
military sources said.
But communiques on violence on Rhodesian soil were
withheld as white Rhodesians rejoiced over the anti
guerrilla strikes carried out in both Zambia and
Mozambique.
The military command said a total of 12 guerrilla
installations were struck in Zambia alone and more
than 1,700 people, including the 226 guerrilla leader
Joshua Nkomo said were killed at the camp outside
Lusaka, may have been slain.
Helicopters flew over Salisbury yesterday bringing
back documents and equipment captured in Zambia.
leisurely pace now that the men were
almost certainly dead.
"Those guys never had a chance,"
said a wetsuit-clad seaman of the 11 men
who had been written off by all but a
handful of friends and family.
A Coast Guard vessel Saturday night
towed back to St. Inigoes the 17-foot
utility boat that saved 18 survivors.