s"tate natio orld / niw 8 The . Daily Collegian , Leftists free executive after 38 days captivity By TOM WELLS Associated Press Writer BOGOTA, Colombia Leftist guerrillas freed Texaco executive Kenneth Bishop from 38 days' cap tivity yesterday, and a relative said his family paid a ransom of several hundred thousand dollars. Bishop and his wife left immediately for the United States. The 57-year-old production man ager for Texas Petroleum, the Co lombian subsidiary of Texaco, was kidnapped ,March 7 by three men and a woman, who ambushed his car and killed his two bodyguards. He was released just after dawn. A wealthy member of Bishop's family paid the ransom, a relative 2nd rebel group enters Nicaragua 'By JOSEPH B. FRAZIER Associated Press Writer SAN JOSE, Costa Rica Eden Pastora, the • ' Nicaraguan revolutionary hero who defected after helping put the Sandinistas in power, • was reported yesterday to be back in his • homeland leading a rebel force against the leftist government. - A spokesman for the Democratic Revolu tionary Alliance, of which Pastora is a leader, said Pastora was in or near Chontales in • southern Nicaragua to take command of a new rebel group organized in recent months. The spokesman, Anibal Arana, said in an • interview that Pastora better known as Commander Zero took a small group of followers with him from Costa Rica. Arana refused to give details for security reasons, ' but said Pastora left sometime after March • 28, ostensibly bound for Mexico City. Tax resisters give money to hospice By LEE LINDER Associated Press Writer PHILADELPHIA Brother Stanley stood at the door of St. John's Hospice, where the hungry and the homeless can get a free meal and a bed, and thanked a group of tax resisters yesterday for a check for $242.69. Bill Strong, a member of the • Friends Peace Committee who led • about 40 men and women under a • • banner that urged, "Transfer Pen tagon Tax $$ to Human Needs," said he expected to return later with another $3OO. • " "This money represerfts federal - taxes we are refusing to pay as a protest against military spend ing," Strong said following a City . Hall courtyard rally by the War Tax Concerns Committee of the Philadelphia Yearly Meeting of the Religious Society of Friends, the Quakers. • "More and more people are re- ' fusing to pay a portion of their taxes as a protest of the huge . • American defense budget," said Strong as followers waved signs that read "Your Tax Dollars Arm ' the World" and "61 Cents of Your Tax Dollar Pays for War." Many wore buttons carrying the slogan, "Taxes for Peace Not War." • NI , • use 1 By SCOTT KRAFT - spread flooding to Louisiana, the system AT&T and the government are studying Warning System which alerts the public to computer building in downtown New Or- Associated Press Writerfailed. ways to switch long distance calls through , nuclear attack or accidental missile launch. leans. Officials cut Commercial power to the . . "I've never been through a set of circum- smaller phone offices in cases of emergen- The Federal Emergency Management building before dawn. • NEW ORLEANS A flooded basement stances like that and I thought I'd seen cy, which is not now possible, Ammon said. Agency office in Baton Rouge, La., used An emergency diesel-powered generator, and the failure of as 2 fuse crippled the long everything," said Art Ammon, manager of Last Thursday, an intricate system of single-band radio backup to keep in touch test-run only two days before, automatically distance telecommunications system of this the Network Operations Center at AT&T backups failed. The worst-case scenario with New Orleans. started but shut itself off 43 ininiltes later • city for 10 hours last week and severed its headquarters in Bedminster, N.J. "We've unfolded. • . "That old radio came before television, when the oil overheated. link with a nuclear attack warning system: never had anything quite this devastating." South Central Bell Telephone's $l2 million satellite and microwave but it works An electrical fuse the size of a cigar had The breakdown demonstrated the vulner- Technology and centralization have made long-distance switching computer, called a when everything else is out," said Al Ben- blown and fans used to cool the engine oil ability of centralized telephone systems in telephone systems more efficient bid also 4ESS, had to be shut down, knocking out 30,- nett, FEMA state communications and never started, said T.E. Lindsey, operations 90 U.S. cities where similar computer more vulnerable to floods, $2 fuses and 000 telephone circuits into and out of south- warning officer. He called the warning manager for AT&T Long Lines in New switching machines sit in guarded, win- terrorism or nuclear attack, according to eastern Louisiana. Some of the circuits system's four-hour outage "extremely rare. Orleans. The engine could not be restarted dowless buildings, according to AT&T offi- Ammon. carried high-level government traffic, Am- I can't think of when a circuit has been down until the oil cooled. cials. "There is concern on the part of govern- mon said. that long." The second backup system, huge batteries The core •of the long-distance telephone ment and it's probably a legitimate one The FAA airport control tower lost its The airport control tower also used a kept on an upper floor, became the power system a computer carrying thousands of about the reliability of the communications computer link to Houston and outlying tow- single-band radio to contact Houston for source for the building and its vital switch ' circuits, including priority government switch network," Ammon said. ers. Shipping operations were paralyzed. clearance to let planes take off from New ing equipment. - lines has survived floods, hurricanes, "It's a fact that if you lose one of those The mayor couldn't telephone the governor. Orleans. Conference calls were set up among engi tornados and blackouts across the country. control units, as we did last week, that some And for 3 hours and 56 minutes, southeast It all began with heavy rains flooding the neers on the scene, in Illinois, New Jersey But when 11 inches of rain brought wide- critical lines are going to be lost." Louisiana was cut off from the National basement of South Central Bell's 16-story and Alabama. told The Associated Press. The relative declined to say exactly how much the ransom was, but said it was several hundred thousand dol lars. The relative asked to remain anonymous for fear other family members might be abducted. Texaco had refused to negotiate with the kidnappers. The Bishops were whisked to the Bogota international airport after his release and put aboard a Texa co executive jet bound for Miami, a Texaco source in Bogota said. Bish op has relatives in Denver and Bishop, Calif. The company source asked not to be identified because of an order that employees were not to talk to the news media about the kidnap "He never arrived in Mexico. The Mexican destination was given for security reasons but Pastora went to Nicaragua and he is in the mountains there," Arana said. "We have been working all these months to build up a follow ing among the people, including members of the popular militias and the Sandinista army." If true, this would open a second front in southern Nicaragua by rebels trying to overthrow the country's leftist, 'three-man junta. Pastora is reputed to be a tough guerril la fighter. • The alliance, apparently based in Costa Rica, is made up mostly of disenchanted Sandinistas or people who had, supported the Sandinistas in the bloody 1978-79 revolution that toppled rightist President Anastasio So moza. Another group called the Nicaraguan Demo cratic Front, based in Honduras; is mostly Saying they have refused to pay their taxes as a protest against U.S. military spending, demonstrators in Philadelphia yesterday march to a downtown soupd kitchen to donate money. ' The source also said that Texaco, which has bulletproof cars for three of its top employees in Colombia, is ordering three more bulletproof cars for Colombian executives. The People's Revolutionary Or ganization, a group claiming to be anti-imperialist, said it had ab ducted Bishop. The guerrilla group sent a communique and a photo of Bishop holding a guerrilla flag to a Bogota newspaper two days after Bishop was kidnapped. The communique said Bishop was to be executed March 29 if Texas Petroleum did not meet the kidnappers' demands. The de mands were never made public. Texaco executive Kenneth Bishop, released after 38 days in captivity by leftist guerrillas in Bogota, arrives in Miami a free man yesterday. comprised of officers and men from Somoza's former National Guard and has been fighting the Sandinista army in northern. Nicaragua for the past three months. Sandinista authorities claim 800 people have been killed in the fighting during that period. The officials also estimate the number of guerrillas in northern Nicaragua at 1,200 but say there could be as many as 5,000. Nicaraguan officials accuse the Reagan administration and the Honduran government of secretly arming and training the front, as part of an overall effort to overthrow the Sandinista government. The United States has neither admitted nor denied'the charges. As Commander Zero, P.astora launched the revolution against Somoza in 1978, seizing the National Palace in Managua and holding some 1,200 people including foreign diplomats and top government officials hostage for days. Somoza was forced to pay ransom, release a group of political prisoners and give them safe conduct to Cuba. . Pastora slipped back into Nicaragua, com manding the Sandinista forces in the south, and served.as Deputy Defense Minister when the Sandinistas took power in July 1979, until he becUme disenchanted with the govern ment's Marxist and pro-Soviet tack and its failure to hold elections. . He disappeared from public view in Nicara gua in 1981 and surfaced in Costa Rica 10 months later, in March 1982. • Yesterday's announcementis the first time the alliance 'has publicly committed itself to fight for the junta's overthrow. Until now, the alliance has claimed to be solely a political organization. . Alliance leaders accuse the Sandinistas of straying from their original goal of a free press, a free political system, a mixed econ omy and a non-aligned foreign policy. AP Laserphoto Avoid transfusions, health expefts say By JANET STAIHAR Associated Press Writer `The incubation WASHINGTON Federal period (for AIDS) health experts said yesterday it is may be quite a long best for people to avoid blood transfusions at this time because time a month or of the risk of contracting a mys- even a year.' terious new disease that ravages the body's immune system.. —Dr. William H. Foege, Dr. William H. Foege, director director of the Centers of the national Centers for Disease for Disease Control Control in Atlanta, told a congres- sional panel that one way the disease, Acquired Immune Defi ciency Syndrome (AIDS), may be Foege said there is no way at this time of detecting AIDS in the passed along is through blood do nated by persons who don't know blood of donors. So, he said, "we they have the illness. are encouraging (people) not to "The incubation period (for get blood transfusions "unless ab- AIDS) may be quite a long time solutely necessary." a month or even a year," he said. If a person chooses to have elec- Foege said the agency has asked tive surgery, he pointed out that high-risk AIDS groups to stop do- "it's always possible to give your mating blood at least until more is own blood in advance." known about how the disease is The disease has stricken 1,300 spread from victim to victim. Americans, and each day five or He identified those groups whi - ch six new patients are found to have have a higher percentage of AIDS AIDS, he told a House appropria occurrences as homosexual tions subcommittee which held a males, intravenous drug users, hearing on the financial needs of and Haitian immigrants. the centers for next year. He said cases also have been Of those 1,300 AIDS patients, he found among hemophiliacs, het- said, 500 have died. But he pre erosexual partners of AIDS pa- dicted that the mortality rate tients, • recipients of blood would eventually soar much high transfusions, and children of par- er because 44 of the first 50 cases ents with the disease. detected have already died. Friday, April 15 Smaller artificial heart . is coming By DONNA ANDERSON Associated Press Writer SALT LAKE CITY As doctors prepare for the next artificial heart implant, researchers are making strides toward developing a heart for small people and an implantable electric motor to re place the bulky air pump now required. • Work began in November at the University of Utah on a heart with oval instead of round ventricles that ; researchers say could be crit ical. in making a heart compact `enough for smaller adults and still have,adequate pumping capacity. "It's just an improvement of the output of the heart with smaller size and better fit," said Walter Rohloff, head of the school's Artifi cial Organs Division machine shop. Furthermore, doctors anticipate implanting in five to 10 years a heart carrying a tiny motor that would be powered by a battery pack worn on a recipient's belt. The motor would replace the 375-pound • air-compressor that powered the heart of Barney Clark, the first permanent artifi cial heart recipient. Clark died March 23 after 112 days on the Jarvik-7 heart. Neither the oval heart nor the motor will be available for the next several implants, since they still require years of .laboratory and animal tests, RohlOff said. Meanwhile, other researchers are preparing a typewriter-size power unit that could be ready in two years. state news briefs Erie cop's death is ruled murder ERIE (AP) Attorney General Leßoy Zimmerman said yester day the 1980 death of an Erie police officer was murder, not suicide, and 'the police department's investigation had been riddled with errors. Zimmerman, who had been asked to investigate the case last spring by Erie County District Attorney Michael Veshecco, said the police erred in judgment, evidence collection, documentation and analysis. Zimmerman gave Veshecco a 93-page confidential report and urged the district attorney to continue the investigation. Zimmer man offered his help, but noted may no longer be possible to find and convict the killer or killers" because of police errors. "The report's conclusion is inescapable: homicide is the only plausible explanation," Zimmerman said. Police Cpl. Robert Owen was shot to death with his own gun while • on duty Dec. 29, 1980. His body was found in the snow near his patrol car in a warehouse parking lot. 4 people die from arson, homicide TOWANDA, Bradford County (AP) A woman who told authori ties she was trying to burn pictures of another woman and her children was charged with homicide and arson yesterday following a fire in which at least four people died, officials said: Diane Carol Clinton, 20, of Towanda, was arrested following yesterday's 3:16 a.m. blaze at the Blast Building apartments and was ordered held without bail in an arraignment before District Justice Jack Huffmah, police said. Clinton'was charged with two counts of criminal homicide, arson and related offenses and faced additional charges for the /other deaths, state police said. The four'who died in the blaze were tentatively identified as Andy Grover, his wife, Jenny, and two of their children, Angela and Andy Jr., according to an affidavit filed with Huffman. nation news briefs OSHA still looking for cancer agents WASHINGTON (AP) The Reagan administration official responsible • for protecting workers' health says his agency will continue a strong lookout for cancer-causing substances. A long itmmering plan to abandon that mission, he concedes, was "off the track." Thorne G. Auchter, chief of the Occupational Safety and Health Administration, denied the turnaround was prompted by the congressional uproar over allegations that the Environmental Protection Agency had favored industry on the same issue. His aides, said Auchter, had simply gotten "off the track" in their review of OSHA's responsibility to identify and classify suspected carcinogens in the workplace. • Auchter stressed that OSHA had never reached the point of proposing a formal revocation of the cancer policy, which was implemented by the Carter adniinistration in January 1980. Possible gonorrhea outbreak stopped ATLANTA (AP) An intense prevention program has con trolled an outbreak of penicillin-resistant gonorrhea in LOs An geles, the first such outbreak in a major U.S. metropolitan area, federal health officials say. The outbreak in Los Angeles County was first ideritified in August 1980, and reached an average of 50-cases each month through March 1981, the Centers for Disease Control in Atlanta said yesterday. By last month, after the program, cases averaged less than 15 a month, the CDC said in its Morbidity and Mortality Weekly Report. Specialists criticize space missiles WASHINGTON (AP) With administration officials noticeably absent, a Senate foreign relations subcommittee yesterday heard several specialists criticize President Reagan's call for a stepped up drive to develop missile defense weapons in space. George Rathjens, a political science professor at Massachusetts Institute of Technology and former arms control official, said he found Reagan's announcement of the effort last month "deeply troubling." "Notwithstanding the optimism of the president and (Secretary of Defense Caspar.W. Weinberger), we had all better realize that security in the nuclear age is not to be found through technical fixes," he testified. world news briefs Japan to look at national security TOKYO (AP) Claims by a former Soviet intelligence agent that Japan is a "paradise for spies" have impelled the government to reassess its ability to keep state secrets and technological advances from falling into unfriendly hands. • The charge by ex-KGB Maj. Stanislav Levchenko in a magazine interview that Moscow has a string of agents among Japan's political and media elite made huge headlines in this open, relatively lenient society. The Foreign Ministry declined to comment in detail but said it was studying how to•tighten security. It' said two senior officials of the French Foreign Ministry, which recently expelled 47 alleged Soviet agents, will arrive April 24 to discuss security and Soviet relations. Iran agrees to oil capping operation KUWAIT (AP•) Iran agreed yesterday to a joint operation by all Persiam Gulf nations to cap leaking offshore Iranian oil wells feeding a vast slick in the gulf, but representatives of other countries doubted that Iraq would cooperate while the Iran-Iraq war continued. Ministerial delegations, meeting within the framework of the Regional Organization for the Protection of the Marine Environ ment (ROPME), continued unofficial consultations until after midnight. stock report Stocks rebound; post 6th gain NEW YORK (AP) Stock prices rebounded from some early selling to post their sixth straight gain and another re cord high yesterday as Wall Street's eight-month-old pull market continued. Auto stocks led the market higher for the second straight day, along with several big name issues responding to fa vorable earnings reports for the first quarter of the year. The Dow Jones average of 30 industrials finished with an OM gain. Volume Shares 106,470,030 es Traded • NYSE Index 90.84 + 0.80 • Dow Jones Industrials cp 1,165.25 + 8.61 OF ITALY OREDKEN" 228 EAST CALDER WAY S. COL PHONE 235-2833 422 WESTERLY PARKWAY MIME 237-6253 PIETRO OF ITALY HAIR STYLISTS Want to lower your grocery bill? - Worry about what you eat? Grow your own health food grads/undergrads RENT 4 GSA GARDEN PLOT AST CHANCE APRIL 18-22 ,05 KERN 63-3191 Mr, DAY*/ LIN/OH/MIL MONTH! locaturru, -11yMersit.5Dr4 DeilaireAve.odesterlearkoab tshowin9 Center 4 6. Noy Ave, *************************************************** * . BLACK ARTS FESTIVAL 4 4g -R• •R• RETROSPECTIVE ON THE 60'S PROSPECTS FOR THE 90'S -R• PROGRAM • * •R• . . * Saturday April 16 The films for the festival reflect the experiences of - ge V .. * 7230 pm, CULTURAL BAZAAR/Pollock Quad Black people. The themes are of economic and **, phychological exploitation' Black unity and aspi- **, • Featuring a synchronized step show by fraternities •6* rations; tokenism and Me creativity of "soul . " the * and sororities .., ' •4 - • * . 200 p.m, A TASTE OF SOUL ' / • . problems of Black youth and interracial understand- .g. ings are all reflected in the films, * Paul Robeson Cultural Center * Samples of Black cuisine - aka soul food - a Tuesday April 19 • * * up/down home feast just like momma used to do it • 700 pm, FILM AND DISCUSSION/ • * - $lOO and worth A Paul Robeson Cultural Center - **,.. 830 p.m. JAll CONCERT' / Film. PUTNEY SWOPE * Eisenhower Auditorium * Discussion. * * Featuring Philadelphia's own PIECES OF A , DREAM - WHERE WILL WE BE IN 1993? • * the hottest young jazz musicians in the country. * Wednesday April 20 . * Rising young giants who will leave their mark on the • * history of jazz music. 800 p.m, SPEAKER - Chief Jomo Logan, HUB Fishbowl * * Tickets on sale at HUB Desk or Eisenhower Auditori- Thursday April 27 * * urn * 7 . 30 p.m, TALENT SHOW-GONG SHOW/ • 7100 m• DANCE '/Paul /Paul Robeson CulturatCenter * P ' ' • Paul Robeson Cultural Center. * * After the concert party till ? -Admission free with jazz Is it talent or is it tacky? You be the judge at an ..* * concert ticket stub or cash at the door. event presented by the Alpha Phi Alpha Fraternity. . 4 Friday April 22 t. Sunday April 17 * -6* • ' * 730 pm, GOSPELRAMA/Schwab 800 SPEAKER - HAKI MADHUBUTI/ * * . Penn State's own Gospel Choir presents a concert * • of gospel music, Paul Robeson Cultural Center .., Haki Madhubuti (Don L. Lee) is the founder and 7., " 250 p.m. MALCOLM XFANNIE LOU HAMER LEADERSHIP editor of Third World Press which is the largest Black '*.., •6* AWARD PRESENTATION/Schwab Auditorium w * book publisher, in America He is editor of Black a . .. 3,00 pm. KEYNOTE SPEAKER -DR BEN CHAVIS/ • Books Bulletin and Director of the institute of Positive 4. * Schwab Auditorium , Education A former poet-in-residence at Howard .g. * Dr. Ben Chavis who was imprisoned illegally for four University, he has written eight books of poetry and .g. * years 'as one of the "Wilmington 10' 1 , i's an inferno- - three books of essays, His talk will address the future 43- * tionally acclaimed civil rights leader, Reverend of Black America. * * Chavis' conviction was overturned in 1980 His topic 77:30 p,m, DANCE/Paul Robeson Cultural Center * . will be "Retrospect on the 60's - Prospects for the * • Free admission The Black Arts Festivals show of .* * 9O's," appreciation for support ' * - 6;00 p.m. CARIBBEAN EXPERIENCE' /HUB Ballroom -• • • Saturday April 23 • * Food, entertainment and music with a Caribbean * ** • ' flair featuring the Trinidad Stars Steel Band Tickets 70:00 p,m. DANCE CONCERT * /Paul Robeson Cultural Center .g. * are $5OO. Call 237-5950- or 238-6668 for iriorma- Featuring SELF DESTRUCT BAND of Philadelphia who -* * * tion, can do it all R&B, pop jazz new wave- Look for * fliers on free and h price admissions, * * * Monday April 18 700 * •m, BLACK FILM FESTIVAL/ April 10 to May 10 * 4 1 . * p, Paul Robeson Cultural Center AFRICAN AND AFRO-AMERICAN ART EXHIBIT * Films,' MALCOLM X and BLUE COLLAR /Paul Robeson Cultural Center * * For Further Information Please Contact * • * The Paul Robeson Cultural Center at 865-3776 or 865-1779. * * * SPONSORED BY THE BLACK ARTS FESTIVAL COMMITTEE ' Entrance Fee .g.• ********************"*"3lo***************r**************** A E STUDENT ASSOCIATI The Daily Collegian Friday, April 15, 1983-9 •••1110111101110111•111•11011101110110111•M•1 1 1 0 1 1 1•1 1 1• 11 1 0 1 10 11 011111110111011 • 1111111110 • Attention All PSU Nursing Students ; Get involved in Student Nurses Association it • • ! • • Meeting Sunday, April 17_1983 6:30 pm H. Dev. Living Center Guest: Mary Ellen Quinn, Medical Program Officer U.S. Navy •■•■•■•o•••s•.•o•.•.•s•N•a•.•U•Nee•o•N•■• •N•o•11••• M,ICCC~S PIZZA AILLYQU CAN •• • $3 FOR ALL THE PLAIN PIZZA YOU CAN EAT! FRI. & SAT., APRIL 15 & 16, 5.7 PM, 434 E. COLLEGE AVE. •\, '. ' ' • , , , , .. \ N, ~