. . _ . . . „ slat / t . / • lid . . , The Daily Collegian • • ` . Tuesday, March 30 • . , • ' 1t * . t . ''. \ " . V • •,„,„. r • • E IN E m 40 I I i i ' i t. ' - _ % 4 PA r e / . i . I. • .' ' / : . ' — 4 ,,,... • , , IN , ; •e• * . ~ , 4 - .4.444 4 4 ~414 P arties l ac k majority a f ter e l ection ~,-..,, ~• ~ ... ~ ~. i . „,,,,,.. .., ..... , , ,„..„ ,,.,.:. •• / . • , :. By RICHARD BOUDREAUX guerrillas who are ready to join in the demo- Deane R. Hinton. ~P.,. s, ~ • -0 • . i.,... . . .. 1 ',4- ...' " • ' Associated Press Writer cratic process. "We are a majority and we're going to fulfill -4 1 $) -1 ‘' •.. .- , •' , - N.... The left boycotted the election, saying its the desire of the people," d'Aubuisson said. ' ~i. , 44 ... . , e., . . SAN SALVADOR, El Salvador (AP) The candidates would have been risking assassina- He did not explain how such a calculation r • Ni. • 4 /. , O ak 4i i \ .., . centrist Christian Democrats and their ex- tion by El Salvador's right-wing "death could be made or announced with only about 7" 4. ' -- • ' • , , ~,,, 4 , 0 A* A - • 4 • l. • • ',N. .' lir i i i ' - <, '. treme-right challengers, both falling short of a squads." one-fourth of the polling places reporting. • : • 4 0 , , lk,N ` ~ . V I lIIP majority in El Salvador's election scrambled Arch-conservative Roberto d'Aubuisson said ' _0.4 iiir ti e ~,, • . The former army intelligence major prom- .".. 4 .. 14•• •.' ~•• . 1 1/ ' .`s..* ', 4 'i e r ' T - •'' for coalition partners yesterday to govern the hours after the meeting with Hinton that his ised to "respect the will of the minority" and „ . war-weary country. Republican Nationalist Alliance (ARENA) and vowed to "lead and control a government of • I/. 0 '- . ' ' "NJ*: '',. l';! ' • ' • ' 0 "", ... The U.S. ambassador called together leaders the four other opposition parties hadagreed to a national 'ty." ~- t ~ "... . 4 i i , . . of all six parties that participated in Sunday's coalition, and claimed victory. : 4'. f -• . . Al 1 4 1 1‘ - . • . . election in an apparent bid to build harmony for "We have won! We have won!" he told a As returns continued to come in yesterday, I ', I.* • ..", i.. Am , • a common front against leftist guerrillas. jubilant crowd at his party's headquarters. the major parties' shares of the vote held .\* ... • _ . ,, v , •• ' 4 '' . % s ' * • , / .i ..• 40.1 .11*, • • 1. , ‘ , The insurgents pressed' their bloody siege of But National Conciliation Party spokesmen steady. The Christian Democrats of Jose Napo- 4 •• ~ ;IK i ' , .:'..fr • • - '', - , . A. • • • ' •• 4. 4 ' I ). 'C i :4 , .! ' . • ' . ' the city of Usulutan, 70 miles southeast of here, said no decision had been made on a coalition leon Duarte, president of the current U.S.- backed civilian-military junta, had 40.5 percent . 4 . .s. .i , \ op 1 • le .T' 1•1 i - in one of the biggest attacks of the 2 1 / 2 -year-old and said none would be until the party's 10- ' ?ti l .1* —, . . :i ''" 0,.. A t ~m 0 civil war in this Central American nation. At member executive council met, possibly today. of the nationwide tally, and ARENA had 29.2 St " ' ,4 ' I.• 04 i•i v . t Ilt , • . I e least four soldiers were reported killed yester- "What d'Aubuisson says is his problem," said percent. „ , I ' ,' ' day. Dr. Armando Rodriguez Eguizabal. "No deci- Each of the two parties predicted it would , I, . • ' 1 4 I • ....- 4 '' ' r i r In Washington, the Reagan administration sion has been taken. We haven't met. There is forma majority coalition with one or more of •' ”,avk e,* , .4 . . - r • A; Ag i •, ' , sent a new signal on negotiations to end the nothing now." the smaller conservative groups in the 60-mem- '' .' '"lt' * • , , •A. - ~%( 4 conflict. Secretary of State Alexander M. Haig D'Aubuisson claimed The opposition parties ber assembly, which is to name an interim , ~, is .• .. 1 .. k . Jr. said the constituent assembly elected Sun- had united at noon —an apparent reference to government and write a new constitution lead- , *k: ' i''' . "••-‘• fA , . • . 4% • ~ ' , , • .., . 11$ 4 , ~, .... 4, r4 ilk .. day should "hold out the hand of conciliation" to the luncheon meeting with U.S. Ambassador ing to general elections, probably next year. ~. . . , ~, i , • , /,',,, 1 1 ,- ~,,,,,,w • , 0 . 4 k,,„ , -..: Haig . calls election a defeat for guerrillas :J.l - k,\: . , .4..:'. ~- „.--- , ,;„'„, N, ' ' s ..• - , i , ~, . ~,.. ~,,• . „it. _. By GEORGE GEDDA their moment of greatest vulnerability," Haig Salvador in the peaceful search for a better 0614 '1 PI )e .- `', , Associated Press Writer said. future under the orderly processes of constitu- Both Haig and deputy presidential press tional democracy," Wright said. . i . , '.- . ~ , ~ WASHINGTON (AP) Secretary of State secretary Larry Speakes hailed the heavy voter , .1 ' Alexander M. Haig Jr. led a chorus of U.S. turnout. • House Speaker Thomas P. O'Neill Jr. D- t - ..- • . 4‘ , • el7i*k ' Al . I A praise yesterday for El Salvador's national "We think it is a victory for the people of El Mass., said he was happy about the elections, , • t ptll • 1 elections, declaring that the "awesome tour- Salvador," Speakes told reporters at the White adding they had shown the "masses down there • , 1 as• .', 'V • . .. age" of Salvadoran voters was an "undeniable House. "In the face of strong guerrilla tactics to appreciate the freedom of elections." ''' ' '''' •,r*, , , repudiation" to leftist guerrillas. prevent them from going to the polls, they wenti .. . • Haig said he is confident the new constituent out in what appears to be record numbers. But O'Neill said the House "would have to see assembly "will find ways to hold out the hand of "It's a failure of the guerrillas to disrupt the _ • , . ' I • i conciliation" to adversaries who are prepared commitment of the people to participate in the who the victors are first" before deciding on. future aid to El Salvador. , • • . . , . , , ' ' to take part in the democratic process. democratic process," Speakes said. .. . .. , - ",...„‘ , k.. . . In a rare appearance in the State Department On Capitol Hill, House Majority Leader Jim Haig, however, indicated he was confident • .press briefing room, Haig said Sunday's results Wright, D-Texas, said the heavy voter turnout American assistance would continue even . , ~ . , ~, \:, . ,op , , . ; • are both a military defeat for the guerrillas as proves beyond a doubt that the terrorists and . though it was uncertain whether the new gov- • 1 .1••'..: ' '••:•• "....--sW3A,„tr•' ,- . - •:• , • .?. 4 4 ' well as a political repudiation. the guerrillas do not speak for the people of El ernment in El Salvador would be headed by . AP Laserphoto "Despite their clear intent to disrupt the Salvador. refdrmist President Jose Napoleon Duarte or elections, the guerrilla forces were. unable to "We should call upon the guerrillas to lay by anti-reform rightists led by retired Maj.• / Rollin along . . shake either the people or the security forces at down their arms and join the brave people of El Roberto d'Aubuisson. An Amish carriage rambles through scenic Lancaster County on a spring afternoon. . . • m • lrJri , F.,••,,;,,k.- , ~,,,;-„ 4,. , - Congressmen attend hearing, tour TMI ::„,,,., • . • .c.„4 e -- 404 ....t 1.. , -1 :: By RICH KIRKPATRICK and local concern about TMI "hasn't gone away as I.Friends of TMI, a pro-nuclear group, questioned why ,l' : • . 1 Ail • • Associated Press Writer expected it would." Udall comes to visit the plant on each anniversary of •- , • : ..., ' , , •,*, P. *.. • ',, i :,-, , The plant was damaged on March 28, 1979, in the the accident, but has yet to convince Congress to help - • - • , - / •;.1' - MIDDLETOWN, Pa. (AP) A small group of nation's worst commercial nuclear accident. A series fund cleanup. .% , congressmen listened to pro- and anti-nuclear groups of malfunctions and operator errors permitted the The money used for the trips could help clean the, - 0 1; • and took a brief tour of the Three Mile Island nuclear radioactive core to lose itsprotective coating of radioactivity from the plant, she said.' LA•• .. •• . ' :: ,• • . , - , 4 ,". plant yesterday, but stopped short of offering any water and officials believe portions of the core "Talk has gone on long enough, and it has not been ' , /VP l', le ~ 1 , 0 ,- , :..vimiliwp. , " 0- , cleanup commitments from Congress. melted. cheap," she said.'"lt is time for action." • , - i • ••;!., ' „•• • • ) ; i . ,;, . , ow' - 1 Rep. Morris K. Udall, D-Ariz., presided over a two- Vento said Congress cannot make a decision until it The Union of Concerned Scientists complained that I •',•;-' ~. • ." - , .....-A',.. '-• - •,.•,L.• - hour hearing marking the third anniversary of the has more facts about the cleanup and the extent of the the federal Atomic Licensing 'and Safety Board • ' " ‘'-'' •--- - e= ~,-. ... - - • , .1 , ....,... TMI accident. Afterwards, he and other members of damage within the reactor. ignored or suppressed issues when it heard testimony ~••. *....! ...„ ~. . '.'-‘,"..,-, r '..„ '4, . , , ! • ~ , n-• , his group were briefed on cleanup by top officials of Although the utilities would like the federal govern- . on restarting the undamaged Unit 1. ' •••,, • •••,:,. '. • '', 4 i c ; . • ;.• General Public Utilities Corp., which owns the plant. ment to pick up the bill for cleanup, "we're not going • UCS representative 'Robert Pollard said prelimi , .•;',. - Udall said there was little hope for congressional to buy that," Vento said. nary testimony from some Nuclear Regulatory Com - . .• o .... ",.. i 4 ' ' ~:: : I v, .. .... ie- •• i ' -. . ' ..,.., - action this year on any of the Pennsylvania proposals "There's no agreement about the nature of our 'mission staff agreed with UCS contentions on some i ~; for spreading part of the estimated $1 billion cleanup responsibility at the national level with respect to saftey issues. But the testimony was either altered or ~ , : I '. ' . .- ' . ' ' ,:i. '1 F .. - - 6 ' costs among utilities around the country. , this," he said. "We're not magicians. We can't make not delivered at all before the board, he said. i .• , . i-z ir -.. ~. .. ~ . t . . - ~. . ..• •.w , - : . w :,",i 4 . "•,.. - 4 ". , -. , •P. • '' . , .., . . . • o •, 't" . ' "I think we owe the country and this area in consensus when there is none." • I._ I.' 1 particular a decision on this point," he said after . 4 - ' completing the tour. "But this is an election year and Officials of General Public Utilities Corp., which owns the plant, showed the congressmen a tube-like Members of Three Mile Island Alert and the York Environmental Alliance said they were at a disad vantage in the hearings because they had little television camera that will be lowered into the ' partisan lines are going to harden shortly. .. . I would money and could not match GPU's and the NRC's , • - ' - '".'",-- ' i'• - ,- 4 , e to see an answer this year but in all honesty I lik damaged core to allow the first visual inspection legal expertise. • ••• •. ~, ..• s :; can't tell you there will be one." since the accident. The group. was shown a video - Udall was joined by one.other member of the House • taped test done on the undamaged Unit 1 reactor. "There's nothing quite as sad in public proceedings • as a mismatch," Udall . said. He said he hopes . - . • . 4 . 4‘;'- - •-•• ~ • •••, 4 . . .... ; • ' . •• Interior Committee's subcommittee on energy Inside the plant, the congressmen were taken to a ••• - . _. . ••• -! , ,„• 4 ,,, - ..,• . ,-, , . - -,., ,- , Bruce Vento, D-Minn. Also present for the hearing command center where a plant technician monitors legislation will eventually be enacted providing funds , •• . ' .. _ .•—• , ' - •• , . ' . ...:F . . and tour was Rep. Mickey Edwards, R-Okla. Penn- eight remote-controlled television cameras that can to such groups in regulatory proceedings. AP Laserphoto Sylvania Reps. Allen Ertel, D-Montoursville, and scan the interior of the sealed containment building. Jack Stotz, former chairman of the Middletown Congressmen Mickey Edwards, R•Okla. (left), Morris Udall, D-Ariz. (center), and William Goodling, R-York, attended the hearing The group was also shown concrete bunkers where Area Association, said people are frustrated that the Bruce Vento, D•Minn.,.speak informally to the media at the Three Mile Island while Rep. Robert Walker, R-Lancaster, toured the radioactive resins from the plant's water filtration cleanup has progressed so slowly. He questioned why visitor center near Middletown. Udall, chairman of the interior Committee, held a plant. systems are stored. Congress could bail out Chrysler Corp. and other hearing for citizens before a tour of the plant yesterday. Udall said cleanup is going better than he expected At the hearing, Jan Chwastyk of the Family and companies and then ignore GPU. , . Polish group reports Reagan expected to back nuclear talks WASHINGTON (AP) President nounced for the conference. viet President Leonid I. Brezhnev's and Cruise missiles in Western Europe Reagan is expected to back a call for Backing the resolution, originally March 17 offer to freeze deployment of in 1983. 21 newspapers shut • U.S.-Soviet negotiations to gradually proposed by Sens. Henry Jackson, D- medium-range nuclear missiles in the Reagan always has insisted that reduce nuclear weapons at a news Wash. and John Warner, R-Va., would European part of the Soviet Union as there be verifiable reductions in nucle- By THOMAS W. NETTER of the Communist Party and criticiz conference this week, administration allow the president to acknowledge the not going far enough. officials said yesterday. growing national concern over the The Brezhnev announcement was ar weaponry. Associated Press Writer ing the government as the Solidarity The president has rejected a propo- arms race while still dealing with the widely seen as the latest attempt to NATO contends its new missiles are union-led reform movement gained sal sponsored by 20 senators and 154 Soviets from a position of strength. counter 'NATO plans to begin deploy- necessary to counter the more than 300 WARSAW, Poland. (AP) The ground. . House members for an immediate The administration has rejected So- ment of 572 medium-range Pershing II Soviet SS-20 missiles already in place. chairman of the new, pro-martial law When Jaruzelski ordered martial journalists association said yesterday law Dec. 13, most of the press was freeze on nuclear arms, contending such a move would place the United that 21 newspapers have been shut shut down and uniformed military • States at a disadvantage. ouse members ,support arms re du' ction the military government. casters. Newspaper down and 705 journalists purged by announcers re laced staffs were re laced civilian news- Instead, the president is expected to follow the suggestions contained in a The figures on the press crackdown quired to sign loyalty oaths in order to e bipartisan resolution introduced last By DON WATERS have deployed 300 medium-range missiles and the NATO were provided by Klemens resume publishing, according to re week by eight 'senators, including Ma- Associated Press Writer alliance has deployed none. Krzyzagorski at a news conference porters and editors. jority Leader Howard H. Baker Jr., R- for foreign reporters. He is the chair- The new association has promised Tenn., and Minority Leader Robert C. • WASHINGTON (AP) Thirteen House members, in- Pursuing this argument as he introduced the resolution, man of the Association of Journalists ~ • • • to remain within the framework of Rep. William Carney, R-N.Y., said: of People's Poland, which replaced Byrd, D-W.Va., the officials said. eluding the chamber's Republican leadership and key generally accepted principles of polit- The resolution asks the administra- Democrats on defense-related committees, introduced a "A freeze at current levels would perpetuate the current the pro-Solidarity, 8,000-member As tion to "propose to the Soviet Union a , resolution yesterday calling for U.S.-Soviet negotiations instablity (in nuclear forces). This is not enough. A mutual sociation of Polish Journalists that the ical culture and serving the interests 1 long-term, mutual and verifiable nu- . aimed at a gradual reduction of nuclear armaments. and verifiable freeze must occur at equal and substantially government dissolved March 20. The of socialism." clear forces freeze at equal and sharp- The measure is identical to one that received lower levels of forces if it is to contribute to peace and dissolved group, known as SDP here, Krzyzagorski said 227 radio and TV ly reduced levels of forces." backing from the Senate's bipartisan leadership last week stability." represented nearly all Poland's work- journalists and 215 working in the "We'll probably endorse that propo- and which President Reagan reportedly will endorse later _ing journalists. publishing houses that print Commu- Joining with Carney as co-sponsors were House Republi- nist Party dailies across Poland were Krzyzagorski said more newspa- , sal," said an administration official this week. can leader Bob Michel of Illinois, GOP Whip Trent Lott of iamong those purged. pers might be dosed due to "econom who asked not to be identified. The action also came on the eve of a special marathon Mississippi, Chief Deputy GOP Whip David Emery of is reasons." He also said new papers "We will act on behalf of newsmen Another official, who also asked that debate on arms control that was scheduled by the House Maine, Reps. Samuel Stratton, D-N.Y., and Dan Daniel, D his name not be used, said "a major after supporters of a rival resolution called for an immedi- Va., chairmen of the Armed Services subcommittees on are being formed to replace some of 'who found themselves stranded and new initiative" from the president was ate worldwide freeze on nuclear weaponry. procurement and military nuclear systems and on read- those ordered closed and that some of we shall defend them regardless of not expected, but that he would ad- the out-of-work journalists might be , the fact if they belong to our associa iness, respectively. dress the issue because "he recognizes The leadership resolutions call upon the United States allowed to work at them. i tion," Krzyzagoriki said. many are concerned about arms con- and the Soviet Union to "engage in substantial, equitable Also, Rep. William L. Dickinson, R-Ala., ranking Repub- Among the publications closed so ;He criticized the leadership of the trol." and verifiable reductions of their nuclear weapons in a lican on the Armed Services Committee; Rep. John P. far is "Kultura," an influential and dissolved SDP for being "so enthu- The president is likely to be dealing manner which would contribute to peace and stability." Murtha, D-Pa., a member of the defense appropriations widely-read weekly. siastic during the political picnic in with the theme at his news conference The administration contends that an immediate freeze subcommittee; and Reps. Robert Walker, R-Pa.; Matthew this week, which probably will be to- would lock the United States into an inferior position in Rinaldo, R-N.J.; Edward Madigan, R-I11.; Benjamin Gil- Poland's state-run press last year Warsaw in July and August 1981 when • began demanding freedom from their duty was to 'tell the truth about morrow. A time has not been an- nuclear forces, especially in Europe, where the Soviets man, R-N.Y. ; and Richard Chaney, R-Wyo. censorship, challenging the authority events." state news briefs Trains collide near Philly, 26 injured BRISTOL, Pa. (AP) A stalled Bos ton-to-Philadelphia passenger train was rammed by a locomotive that had been sent to help tow it yesterday, and 26 people were injured, none seriously, au thorities said. Three of the injured were admitted to Bucks County hospitals and were in satis factory or stable condition, while others were treated for cuts and bruises and released. Amtrak spokeswoman Debbie Marci niak said the engineer of the six-car train reported it had stalled with engine trou ble at 12:55 a.m., about 24 miles from its destination. A replacement locomotive sent to the scene rammed the front of the passenger Doctor links herpes , virus to lipstick sample PHILADELPHIA (AP) 7 . A Universi- "Normally herpes does not have a very ty of Pennsylvania virologist has issued a long life outside the body,", Blough said. warning about the use of store lipstick But in this case the waxy surface of the samples, after treating a college student lipstick enhanced the virus' longevity, who apparently caught herpes simplex the researcher said, by keeping the virus by applying the makeup moments after a concentrated and preventing it from carrier had used it. quickly drying out. Herpes is a disease that is usually spread by direct contact between people, The Centers for Disease Control in but in this case the intermidiary was a Atlanta reported Friday that genital substance, said Dr. Herbert A. Blough of herpes one of the places on the body the university-affiliated Scheie Eye Insti- that can be affected by the herpes virus tute. trails .only influenza and the common Blough, who has been researching cold as the nation's fastest spreading , herpes for 10 years, said yesterday that it vi rus. has never been reported to his knowledge About half of the herpes viruses go that herpes could be transmitted by away by themselves, but others tend to lipstick if the person were infected quick- cause repeated painful outbreaks that ly enough. disrupt victims' lives, Blough said. natYox news briefs 2 dead, 2 missing in Haitian boat accident HIGHLAND BEACH, Fla. (AP) The bodies of two Haitian women were wash ed up on a beach here yesterday from a freighter that had capsized in the rough Atlantic. High seas, stiff winds and poor visibility forced officials to stop search ing the ocean for two others missing. Six survivors struggled, to shore .through 10-foot waves after their vessel capsized sometime before midnight yes terday. One man was hospitalized for exposure and the others were sent to the Krome Avenue refugee camp west of Miami, where some 500 Haitian refugees are being held. Mike Kelley, a Coast Guard spokes man, said no distress signals or radio messages were received froM the Espe rancia, a motorized, wooden-hulled freighter. 6-year-old's trial may move to Disney World GAINESVILLE, Fla. (AP) The case of a 6-year-old girl charged with bloody ing the nose of a. playmate may move from criminal court to Disney World under the auspices of a private arbitra tor, officials said yesterday. qk A "citizen arbitrator" will sit down with the parents of first-grader Nancy Jo Burch and those of they-year-old alleged victim, Shirley Lynn Nickolls, and help them resolve the dispute, State Attorney Eugene Whitworth said. - "I may suggest that we all go to dinner , s and the movies together; bring the kids. We may all go to Disney World or some thing," said Gary Weinstein, who will Boston inquiry studies harbor plane crash BOSTON (AP) A state inquiry has found no evidence that airport officials knew runways were icy before a jetliner skidded into Boston Harbor, a legislative hearing was told yesterday. Airport op erators called the charge "absurd." James J. Kerasiotes, state undersecre tary of transportation, said "the entire airport was experiencing a worst case situation" when the DC-10 crashed due to the weather Jan. 23. Citing an inquiry by the Massachusetts Aeronautics Commission, he said, "We have found no evidence that anyone in Massport operations management had taken a comprehensive look at runway a 15R via the snow committee procedure = •-• , world news briefs French train blast may be terrorist attack 'LIMOGES, France (AP) A bomb exploded aboard an express train racing through the hilly countryside near Lim oges last night, gutting one, car, and killing at least five passengers. Officials speculated that it was either a terrorist r. attack or an accidental explosion of a terrorist bomb. Twelve people were injured and two of the injuries were described as serious. French television said police believed explosives being transported by terror ists may have blown up accidentally. The t 1 broadcast said authorities were question ing a young woman passenger. Two more Stevenson works to be published LONDON (AP) Two previously un- known stories by Robert Louis Steven ' son, discovered by a scholar at Yale University, are to be published this sum mer in the 19th-century novelist's native Scotland. Konrad Hopkins, American founder of Wilfion Books in Paisley, Scotland, hopes to have the book on sale by June. The stories, "An Old Song" and "The Edifying Letters of the Rutherford Fami ly," were recently discovered in Yale libraries by Roger Swearingen, a world authority on the author of "Kidnapped" train, derailing the engine and the first car, Marciniak said. "The whys and how-fors I do not not know," Marciniak said, adding that Am trak will investigate the accident. The accident delayed southbound Am trak trains up to 45 minutes, spokeswo man Diane Elliott said. The train left Boston at 6:35 p.m. Sunday and had been due to arrive in Philadelphia at 1:23 a.m. yesterday, Marciniak said. One of the 11 injured people treated at Lower Bucks County Hospital was ad mitted in stable condition, a spokeswo man said. She' identified the patient as Joseph Gibbs of Wilmington, Del. "There probably wasn't even a radio on board, unfortunately," he said. "Our first warning that something was wrong was when the survivors swam ashore." It was the second fatal Haitian shipw reck off Florida's Gold Coast within five months. About 10 miles to the south, 33 refugees drowned Oct. 26 after their sailboat broke up in rough surf. Federal authorities said they believed the 70-foot vessel was on a legitimate cargo mission, not carrying would-be illegal refugees. "At this point, as far as we know, they were on a regular run of an island coastal freighter. They apparently were coming to Miami to pick up cargo to take back to Haiti," said Beverly McFarland,' spokeswoman for the U.S. Immigration and Naturalization Service. function as arbitrator Nancy Jo was accused of striking Shir ly Lynn in the face with a stick during an after-school spat Feb. 4. The case ballooned into a national news story after a circuit judge ruled the 6-year-old's case could be heard in juve nile court, rejecting a defense attorney's contention that a child is not sufficiently cognizant to commit a crime. Then defense lawyer Alan Wilhite fu eled the headlines Friday by winning her a jury trial in adult criminal court. Under Florida law, she is entitled to such a proceeding. William. C. Coleman, director of avi ation for the Massachusetts Port Author ity, which runs Logan International Airport, countered that "to say no com prehensive look at the runway was taken is absolutely absurd." And Coleman's boss, Massport Direc tor DaVid W. Davis, testified it was "the collective judgment of the people at the airfield to keep (the runway) open." Other witnesses told the Transporta tion Committee that the World Airways jet . touched ground about halfway down the runway Jan. 23, and that its wing flaps may not have been in the correct position to stop the jet in the distance available. An official at the Limoges prefecture (regional authority) described the explo sion as "a terrorist attack." There was no immediate claim of responsibility for a bombing. The blast hit the second car of the 15- car train about 15 miles northeast of the city of Limoges on a regular Paris-Tou louse run. A spokesman for the state-owned rail road network SNCF said the train, a favorite of businessmen, could Carry 450 people. But he did not know how many were aboard on a quiet Monday night. and "Treasure Island." "An Old Song" is probably Stevenson's "very first work of fiction apart from a few childhood stories," Hopkins said yesterday in a BBC interview. Stevenson was about 27 when he wrote it. The story was discovered by Swearing en in an 1877 edition of "London" mag azine, which printed the 16,000-word piece anonymously. He recognized it as Stevenson's because he had earlier found a manuscript fragment of it in the au thor's hand. MEXICAN CORN SOUP Get a large bowl of our delicious, homemade __A Mexican corn soup with crackers or chips for only ji ...._,em . 6i , (with this coupon) 69 .t 01 ) Re ... nip gIS Open: Mon-Thurs 11a.m.-12a.m Fri & Sat 11-3:30a.m Sunday 12-12a.m Insurance and Real Estate Club Meeting • Wed., March 31 • 7:30 pm • 151 Willard' co Speaker: Mark Bigatel, President of the Centre County Board of Realtors Topic: Real estate in the near future also:- Resume Books discussed U. 102 - Refreshments Starting April 4; our Fabulous Sunday Buffet will begin at noon.. . Keep your eye on the ball. (BaSeball that is.) daily te sporits collegian with The Accounting Club & Beta Alpha Psi Present Douglas McCormick Treasurer for the Pgh Pirates speaking on "Accounting for a Sports Entity" March 31, 7:30 p.m., 121 Sparks Bldg. All interested students are welcome! R• 026 TAX SEMINAR: Grad Student Stisends WED. ittolßell 31 7:00 - 9:00 PR 10/ A'ERN 0110:190ZW ir PJ A r a t t liE'S ' ll 7p , Ntei, THROUGHOUT MARCH AT Tht ft& eak Downtown East West CARNEGIE-MELLON UNIVERSITY SCHOOL OF URBAN AND PUBLIC AFFAIRS INVITES YOU TO DISCUSS YOUR CAREER SigN Up FOR FRidAy, Apßil. 2 AT TILE PLACEMENT Of 408 BouckE BuildiNg If you're thinking about a career in management, you should know about the opportunites available at Carnegie-Mellon University's School of Urban & Public Affairs. A remarkable variety of career op portunites are available to grciduates of our MS and PhD programs. WilliAM J. STAhIER DIRECTOR Of AdMiSSiONS Ph: (412) 578-2164 The Daily Collegian Tuesday, March 30, 198 1 wil r.„
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers