9—The Daily Collegian Thursday, Feb. 9, 1984 state/nation/world Britain pulls troops from Beirut Other peacekeeping nations call for U.N. replacements ' 'By DAVID MASON Chief European Correspondent LONDON Britain withdrew its Beirut peacekeeping force from the beleagured Lebanese capital yes terday, a day after plans for a U.S. pullback were announced. Italy or dered a "gradual withdrawal" of its contingent. But France, the other nation in the multinational force in Beirut, said there were no immediate plans to withdraw its troops. France, Italy and Britain repeat ed their desire for replaceMent of the force by one from the United Nations. Britain announced yesterday morning that because of the "dete riorating security situation" in Bei rut it was redeploying its 115-man force to the royal fleet auxiliary ship Reliant off the Lebanese coast. Italy has a force of 1,400 men in Beirut, reduced from 2,100 in the past month. Defense Minister Gio vanni Spadolini said yesterday he had ordered Italy's military chiefs of staff to take "all necessary steps" for a gradual withdrawal of the force. A statement froni the defense ministry did not give de tails, or say how many if any of the Italian troops would remain behind. Spadolini said the impending re moval of the U.S. Marines "changes all the terms of the problem" and that the American and British pull-, out meant the Italian presence "has become logically and politically un sustainable." The French :defense and foreign ministries said there were no imme diate plans to redeploy the 1,300- man French force, but said that all patrols outside their sector had been halted. Spadolini repeated the Italian po sition that a. United Nations force should take over the Italian respon sibility of guarding Palestinian ref ugee camps. A spokesman at United Nations •• . . • 111 E • II II Lawmakers across nation debate raising legal drinKing age By BILL McCLOSKEY - latures. "Even in states where we thought young persons commuting to border states 21 for all alcoholic beverages: Alaska, Ar- has kept the legal drinking age at 18 since Associated Press Writer there wasn't a chance, there's a lot of where the drinking age is lower." , kansas, California, Delaware, Illinois, In- 1971, opposes raising the age to 21. He says activity," he said in an interview. "There is simply no way to adequately diana, Kentucky, Maryland, Michigan, the solution to drunken driving among teen . WASHINGTON The highway death toll The problem of teen-age drinking was address the needless tragedies caused by Missouri, Nevada, New Jersey, New Mexi- agers is improved education and, better among young, drinking drivers, especially recognized by President Reagan's commis- young persons commuting to border states co, North Dakota, Oklahoma, Oregon, Penn- enforcement of drunken driving laws. under-age youngsters who cross state bor- sion on drunken driving, which recommend- except by establishing a uniform drinking sylvania, Utah and Washington. Snelling says driving deaths have de ders to drink legally, is the target of scores ed in December after an 18-month study that age among the states," the commission Four states, Vermont, Hawaii, Louisiana creased in Vermont. of bills in state legislatures that are aimed Congress set a legal drinking age of 21 and said. and Wisconsin, have the lowest legal drink at raising the legal drinking age. cut off federal highway funds to any state The National Safety Council in Chicago ing age of 18. Wisconsin has enacted a 19- Although Congress is taking steps to set a "There is a tremendous amount of inter- that fails to enforce that standard. estimates that about half the 46,000 traffic year -old drinking age, which goes in effect nationwide minimum legal drinking age of est in raising the drinking age throughout "Thereis evidence of a direct correlation deaths in the United States in 1982 were July 1. 21, Moulden says, state laws are "much more likely to be enforced." the country," said John Moulden of the between the minimum drinking age and alcohol-related. A report by the National In West Virginia, Gov. John D. Rockefel- National Transportation Safety Board as he alcohol-related crashes among the age Highway Traffic Safety Administration ler IV says his primary legislative goal for Several governors, as well as Jim Bur scanned a computer printout of alcohol-re- groups affected," the panel said. found that eight states which had raised the the year is to raise his state's legal drinking nett, chairman of the National Transporta lated legislation being debated across the "The lack of uniformity among state laws legal drinking age showed an average 28 age of 19 for residents. Hearings on the tion Safety Board, oppose any congressional country. is especially critical regarding the mini- percent annual reduction in nighttime fatal proposal are to begin today in the state threat to withhold federal highway money He estimates that more than 200 proposals mum legal drinking age because an incen- accidents involving drivers aged 18 to 21. Legislature. ' - as a way of enforcing a uniform drinking have been introduced in various state legis- tive to drink and drive is established due to Only 19 states have a legal drinking age of Gov. Richard Snelling of Vermont, which age of 21 among the states. headquarters in New York said a U.N. force could be placed in Beirut if the Lebanese government re quested it and if other Lebanese factions, as well as U.N. members and the entire U.N. Security Coun cil, agreed. Max Gallo, the French govern ment spokesman, said following a Cabinet meeting that France hopes for a U.N. Security Council meeting soon. He recalled a statement Tues day by French President Francois Mitterrand that the multinational force should be replaced by "an intervention and a presence of the United Nations." Later, in a television interview, Premier Pierre Mauroy said that France is "acting, acting with force and acting with perseverance" to try to get the Security Council "to really come to the rescue of Leb anon." He said. France had never wished to keep forces in Lebanon and that it was "absolutely indis pensable that a United Nations force replace the multinational force." Television commentator Paul Na hon said in Paris that while France officially was maintaining its con tingent in Beirut at the moment, "it is looking for any opportunity to pull out, for example at the request of the Lebanese government." British Foreign Secretary Sir Ge offrey Howe told the House of Com mons that he and Prime Minister Margaret Thatcher had been "pressing for a number of months" for a United Nations force. Howe said he had ordered the British mission to . the United Nations to bring up the matter again yester day Howe added, however, that there first would have to be a request from the Lebanese government fol lowed by approval from a "wide range of countries." Britain and other Western coun tries fear that the Soviet Union would veto creation of a United Nations force for the Beiruit area. PFC Greg Nelson of New Orleans stands atop his packed equipment, waving an American flag and flashing a victory sign yesterday as the Marines prepared for their departure from Beirut International Airport. There is already a United Nations force of some 6,000 troops in Leb anon, but they are confined to the southern part of the country. President Reagan announced Tuesday night that the 1,600 U.S. Marines in Beirut would be rede- ployed on ships off the Lebanese coast. British officials said they had been informed of the Reagan an nouncement and that the British decision to follow suit was made "independently" later. Soviet will visit By ANDREW ROSENTHAL Associated Press Writer MOSCOW The Kremlin yes terday announced that Politburo member Geidar A. Aliev would visit Syria this month, and a Soviet source said Aliev was assigned to coordinate Soviet-Syrian military policy in the face of escalating warfare in Lebanon. The announcement followed President Reagan's statement Tuesday night that the U.S. Ma rines would be moved from their Beirut base to Navy ships off the coast of Lebanon. A U.S. official in Washington, who, specializes in Soviet. affairs, said the visit,almost certainly was arranged before Reagan's deci sion was made public: He, said Aliev's field is domestic matters such as industrialization, not for eign-policy or military matters. The Soviet news agency Tass dismissed the Reagan's decision as "an attempt to deceive public opinion with claims about the 'pullout' of servicemen who are in fact being left near Lebanese shores. "American ships are shelling Lebanese territory, the American aggression is progressing at full• tilt under the cover of the decep tive maneuver," Tass charged. In a separate commentary, the Novosti news agency called the decision to move the Marines an election-year ploy but insisted it "does not change the essence of U.S. actions." Novosti claimed the United States actually intends to escalate involvement in Lebanon and warned this could lead to clashes with other Arab states. "Washington can hardly ignore the Soviet Union's invariable sup port for Syria, which is a major Arab factor of resistence to U.S.- Israeli scheming in the Middle East," Novosti said. official Syria Aliev's planned trip was the latest indication of Kremlin sup port for Syria, its primary Middle' East ally and a recipient of large scale Soviet military aid. Some observers noted that Aliev is going abroad at a time when the Kremlin is believed to be under going leadership problems caused by President Yuri V. Andropov!s prolonged illness, and said the trip indicates the impcirtance the Sovi ets attach' to Syria and the Leb anon crisis. "The situation in the Middle East is very serious," said the Soviet, source, insisting he not be identified in any way. "Geidar Aliev is going to Syria to work out some measures, including mili tary ones, to restore peace in the region " The Soviet Union sees the Leb anon fighting as a threat to Syria, where there are an estimated 5,000 Soviet military techniCians. The source said Aliev's visit also was aimed at "guaranteeing the secu rity" of Soviet personnel'in Syria. President Reagan has blamed the. Syrians for the upsurge in fighting in Lebanon. And in his announcement that the U.S. Ma rines would be moved out of Leb anon, Reagan authorized U.S. Naval guns and warplanes to at tack anybody firing on Beirut from Syrian-controlled areas of Lebanon. "Ronald Reapn said he sent Marines into Grenada to protect American students," the . source said. "There are many So‘iiet spe cialists in Syria, Soviet citizens, who must be protected." Soviet technicians in Syria man Soviet-supplied SAM-5 surface-to air missile bases. The Kremlin also has helped Syria rebuild its army from losses suffered in the 1982 Israeli invasion of Lebanon, and Western sources have said Moscow last year supplied Syria with sophisticated SS.-21 missiles. state news briefs Legislation may replace no-fault law HARRISBURG (AP) The House yesterday approved and sent to Gov. Thornburgh a bill that lawmakers said should win the governor's approval of a new auto insurance system to replace the no-fault law. The House voted 147-52 for a bill that is a "companion" to legislation which is now before Thornburgh and would end manda tory no-fiult coverage and give motorists more choices of accident coverage. The Senate approved the companion bill on Tuesday. The governor, who has until Sunday to sign the initial bill, has delayed action while his administration and lawmakers worked to meet several objections he had raised The proposed insurance system still would permit unrestricted lawsuits by accident victims, unlike no-fault, which allows damage suits only after medical bills exceed a $750 "threshold." Under no-fault, a motorist must buy a comprehensive package of benefits for himself, whether needed or not. Opponents system say it is responsible for spiraling premium costs in Pennsylvania. Goode pledges support to Mondale PHILADELPHIA (AP) Philadelphia Mayor W. Wilson Goode has decided to back Walter Mondale's bid , for the Democratic presidential nomination, an aide to the mayor said yesterday. Mondale was to join the mayor today at a noon rally at Independence Hall, stopping briefly on his way from New Hamp shire to Minnesota, according to Bill Epstein of the mayor's office. Goode would become the fourth black mayor of a major Ameri can city to endorse Mondale, following Mayors Colman Young of Detroit, Tom Bradley of Los Angeles and Richard Arrmington of Birmingham, Ala. Lana Felton, coordinator of the Rev. Jesse Jackson's Pennsylva nia campaign committee, said the loss of Goode's endorsement to Mondale "will have no impact" on Jackson's candidacy. nation news briefs Astronauts take second space walk CAPE CANAVERAL, Fla. (AP) Two Challenger astronauts refueled their backpacks yesterday for an encore venture into open space, while officials on the ground worried that rain and clouds might prevent the first Florida shuttle landing on Saturday. Mission Control told the crew that "you're the talk of the world" after . the spectacular excursion that Bruce McCandless and Robert Stewart made into space Tuesday with no rope to anchor them to the shuttle. McCandless and Stewart were scheduled for a second walk beginning at 6 this morning, but their three fellow astronauts joked they might fight for the chance "to share all the good deals." President Reagan will telephone the astronauts at . 10:25 this morning from his ranch near Santa Barbara, Calif., deputy White House press secretary Larry Speakes said. Speakes said McCand less and Stewart "will be outside their spacecraft" when they receive the call. Panel cautions against procedure WASHINGTON (AP) Taking sound-wave pictures of fetuses in the womb seems to be safe as well as helpful in many instances', but the procedure should not be used routinely for every pregnancy, a panel of experts concluded yesterday. The group assembled by the National Institutes of Health said ultrasound imaging should only be used for specific indications until studies are completed to prove more conclusively that the procedure is safe for fetuses and mothers. The panel pointed out that after 20 years of use, no adverse effects attributed to ultrasound have been found. But it noted that no definitive clinical trials have been conducted and that caution was prudent. The panel listed about 30 medical circumstances that would justify taking ultrasound images of a fetus in the womb. These included estimating the age of the fetus for women who may have difficulty with labor or delivery; evaluating the growth of the fetus in mothers suffering with chronic diseaseg and finding the source of unexplained maternal bleeding. world news briefs Shultz endorses new defense force BRIDGETOWN, Barbados (AP) Secretary of State George P. Shultz said yesterday the United States expects to support a new regional defense force being organized by nations of the eastern Caribbean Shultz endorsed the concept at a news conference on the last leg of a five-nation, nine-day swing through Latin America and the Caribbean. The prime minister of Dominica, Eugenia Charles, has said that in some countries a force of 15 well-armed and well-trained men could seize power by force. The security forces in some of the smaller countries of . the area are limited to a few hundred policemen., Shultz discussed the defense force concept during meetings yesterday with representatives of Jamaica, Barbados, Antigua, Dominica, St. Lucia, St. Kitts-Nevis and St. Vincent, all of which have contributed to the Caribbean Peace Force in Grenada. Shuttle competitors eye mishaps PARIS (AP) One group of scientists is not surprised or overly sorry the U.S. shuttle Challenger has lost two satellites worth $lO5 million in space the men and women who make and market the rival European Ariane rocket booster. "A failure in outer space affects everyone, so it is wrong to say we are jubilant," said Frederic D'Allest, president of Arianespace, which sells space atop the booster built by the 11-nation European Space Agency. "But this makes three disasters for the space shuttle against only two for Ariane." The commercial effect of these failures "is too early to predict," D'Allest said. But he said it could have an important impact on the European share of the 250 telecommunications and data-transmis sion satellites the European Space Agency estimates will be launched this decade. Since the Ariane's 1979 maiden launch from Kourou, French Guiana, two missions have been aborted, resulting in the loss of four satellites, including Marecs-A and Sirio-2. stockrepor • Panic sparks Volume Shares market plunge 116,030,490 NEW YORK (AP) Wall Issues Traded Street rolled up a $27 billion 2,021 loss yesterday, as warnings of Up recession in Washington and 459 strife in Lebanon combined to touch off the steepest slide in Unchanged the Dow Jones industrials in 345 more than 15 months. The decline erased early Down gains and worsened late in the 1,217 session. 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