4—The Daily Collegian Tuesday, Sept. 17,1985 state/nation/world 131 Chinese officials removed from power sign of fatigue. He is the nation’s paramount leader, head of the Central Advisory Commission and PEKING (AP) Chinese lead- Central Military Commission, er Deng Xiaoping swept 131 senior Six Politburo seats were va- Communist Party officials from cated by military men, including power yesterday to make way for Marshal Ye Jianying, an ailing 88- younger men and ensure the sue- year-old member of the Standing cess of his economic and political Committee who fought beside the reforms late Chairman Mao in the commu- He also ended the life-tenure nist revolution. The army has been system that prompted power resistant to Deng’s modernization struggles between stubborn, elder- drive. . ly leaders which have plagued Defense Minister Zhang Aiping, China since the communists took 75; Culture Minister Zhu Muzhi, power in 1949. Deng himself was a 69, and navy commander Liu victim when Chairman Mao Tse- Huaqing, who is in his late 60s, tung dismissed him as a "capital- resigned from the Central Com ist roader” during the 1966-76 Cul- mittee. It was not clear if they tural Revolution. would keep their government By RICK GLADSTONE Associated Press Writer Official announcements said all P^ff• . , f .. _ vcnine tele -131 officials submitted voluntary TVo-thirds of the evening resignations, including 64 full and ncws was devoted o he sir= relori,he24 •ssSsrJsr»trr f . The resignations came at the boldest moves by Deng, who has fourth full session of the 12th Cen- reversed the radical policies of his tral Committee in Peking. Deng predecessors and created unprec and his proteges, party chief Hu edented stability since emerging Yaobang and Premier Zhao Zi- as top leader in 1978. yang, had said earlier that major Before yesterday s resignations, personnel changes would be made the average age of Politburo mem at a series of party meetings this bers was 74. Party chairman Hu month . Yaobang, 69, once said "senility is Deng himself is 81, but shows no a problem” in the hierarchy. ®®®®®®®®®®®®®®®®®®®®®®®®® ® ® ® You Can Save A Life! ® ® ® | Come And Donate At Your g I BLOODMOBILE I ® © | .. TODAY! | | HUB Ballroom iOr-4 | <§) Mon., Sept. 16 &Tues., Sept. 17 ® ® Alpha Phi Omega And Gamma Sigma Sigma g ® ■ ROl2 ® ®®®®®®®®®®®®®®®®®®®®®®®® * Troops chase guerrillas into Angola By MAUREEN JOHNSON Associated Press Writer JOHANNESBURG, South Africa Troops and warplanes swept into southern Angola yesterday to strike South-West African guerrillas who the military said were planning attacks on towns and military bases in the territory. Gen. Constand Viljoen, the armed forces com mander, said Angola’s Marxist government was informed of the strike against guerrillas of the South-West Africa People’s Organization and warned “not to interfere.” It was the second strike in 10 weeks inside Angola, where about 25,000 Cuban troops are based. Viljoen gave no indication of the size of the force, its targets or how deeply it penetrated. Southern Angola is the base area of SWAPO guerrillas fighting for the independence of South-West Afri ca, a mineral-rich territory also known as Nami bia that South Africa has controlled since World War I. •‘Hopefully it (the strike) will be over within a week,” Lt. Gen. lan Gleason, the army chief of U S arms negotiator urges Soviets to name specific plans GENEVA, Switzerland (AP. - fl. Kantpel-n, readinga papered £1 it wii, not abandon the research <** chief U.S. arms control negotiator statement on arrival yesteirdayatthe p g in his prepared statement, Kam said yesterday the Americans are Geneva airport, urged the SovietsJo Kampelman said his delegation is lman referred to remarks by Gor ready for agreement on ending the back up recent public statements .. rea dy for progress and agreement £| chev and others that the soviets arms race if the Soviet Union will with concrete proposals. The talks toward preventing an arms race were wming tQ propose deep reduc _ turn recent public statements into resume Thursday after a two-month in space and terminating the arms tions i n strategic nuclear weapons, specific proposals. \ break. race on Earth” if the Soviets make a “We now await with interest to see Max M. Kampelman said the third His apparent reference was to Sovi- genuine negotiating effort without if these f ora ys into the headlines will round of U.S.-Soviet talks on control et hints of readiness to.agree to preconditions.” be followed, as we hope they will, by of nuclear arms assumes even great- SSaJiSsSateSc The third round of talks begins concrete proposals here at Geneva, at er importance because of the summit United States will scrap its Strateg months before the sum- the negotiating table, the designated s‘jlwjzb5 ‘jlwjzb Democrats and Republicans Beware! Campus Libertarians are back New member meeting Wed. Oct. 18th Rm. 318 Willard 7:30 Guest speakers. & topic: Free Trade or Protectionism Officer Elections will be held Be a Radical Be a Libertarian staff, said last night on government-controlled television. Racial unrest persisted in South Africa. Hun dreds of high school students in Johannesburg’s huge black township of Soweto went on a rampage because of rumors that black leader Nelson Man dela had died in jail. Mandela’s wife said the rumors were false. Police said a gang of young blacks heaving stones and gasoline bombs ambushed a tanker truck loaded with an inflammablfe liquid, tolulene, east of Cape Town on the main road to the city’s airport. The truck’s cab was engulfed in flames, but the blaze was extinguished by firefighters before the tank could explode, and no one was injured, police said. Witnesses at Grootfontein, 157 miles south of Angola and South Africa’s main Namibian air base, said air force Mirage jets took off at various times during the day. Viljoen said reconnaissance and intelligence gathering operations established that guerrillas planned long-range bombardments of military bases and attacks on big towns and residential Danks Penn State Night 20% Off All Purchases Thursday, September 19th SPM-9PM We are extending a personal invitation to Here Are Just Three all Penn State Students, Faculty, Employ- E Xam pies of The Savings ees, and their immediate families to join us on THURSDAY, SEPTEMBER 19th, from Totes Quartz Watches 5:00 p.m. to 9:00 p.m. at Danks downtown Danks Reg. Prices enY department store for PENN STATE Less 20% NIGHT! YOU PAY 22.40 & 24.00 As our special guests you will receive- a j r , g Sweater Vests BIG 20% DISCOUNT ON ALL PUR- Danks Reg. Price $lB CHASES MADE IN THE STORE THAT Less 2 0% $3.60 NIGHT. YOU PAY 14.40 PENN STATE NIGHT is Danks way of . introducing you to our many services and Misses Woolrich Sweaters fashions for you, your home and dorm. We Danks Reg. Price will provide extra sales personnel, extra Less 20% — : — check-out counters, and extra fitting YOU PAY 38.40 rooms to make your evening at Danks more enjoyable. Naomi & Co. Beauty Shop is not included. » pvHPPESiRB jamJr Danks will close at 3:30 PM DEPARTMENT STORES Thursday to prepare for this event. | ATTENTION | I COLLEGE OF LIBERAL ARTS STUDENTS INTERESTED IN EXPLORING CAREERS OVER SEMESTER BREAK WANT TO MEET EMPLOYERS IN YOUR MAJOR EXTERN IS THE PROGRAM FOR YOU IT IS A 3 TO 5 DAY EXPERIENCE WITH AN EMPLOYER WHO IS ALSO A PENN STATE ALUMNUS INTERESTED STUDENTS SHOULD SIGN UP AT THE CAREER DEVELOPMENT CENTER OR THE COLLEGE OF LIBERAL ARTS areas in the northern part of the disputed territo ry. SWAPO has not been known to have used long range artillery before in its battle for Namibia, which South Africa governs under a League of Nations mandate abrogated by the U.N. General Assemby in 1966. After the last cross-border strike early in July, Viljoen said his forces killed 57 guerrillas and lost one man in a two-day operation. SWAPO guerrillas have fought a 19-year guerril la war for Namibia that has killed nearly 10,000 guerrillas and 566 South African troops, by South Africa’s official count. The white-minority government has ignored U.N. demands for a cease-fire and independence for the territory. In Soweto, students streamed from Orlando High School and stoned vehicles in response to the rumors about Mandela, witnesses reported. Three armored vehicles moved up to the school, firing tear gas and rubber bullets to disperse the stu dents. state news briefs Police told to clarify DWI warning HARRISBURG (AP) Police who tell drunk driving suspects that their licenses ‘‘would be subject” to suspension if they don’t take breath tests are giving unclear warnings, Commonwealth Court ruled yesterday. The three-judge panel, upholding the decision of a Delaware County judge, ruled that Nether Providence police improperly informed a driver about the penalty for refusing to submit to a breath test. Under state law, a driver’s license is automatically suspended if the motorist refuses to take a breath test, a Pennsylvania Department of Transportaion spokesman said. The case stemmed from the arrest of Janice O. Landau for driving under the influence df alcohol after she was involved in a one-car accident, according to the ruling. Landau refused to take the breath test even after a police officer told her that her license “would be subject” to suspension if she didn’t submit to the test, Commonwealth Court said. The state Bureau of Traffic Safety suspended her license and argued that the phrase “would be subject” to suspension properly spelled out the penalty. But Commonwealth Court ruled that the warning wasn’t ad equate because the phrase did not make it clear that her license automatically would be lifted for refusing the test. Pennsylvania leads U.S. in acid rain HARRISBURG (AP) Pennsylvania received the most acidic rain in the nation for the third consecutive year, state environ mental officials estimated yesterday. Rainfall in the state was an average of 60 times more acidic than pure rain and some weekly samples showed acid levels 251 times that of uncontaminated rain, the Department of Environ mental Resources said. The most acidic weekly reading in 1984 was 3.2 on the pH scale at Milford in eastern Pennsylvania. By comparison, vinegar has a pH of 3. Neutral pH is 7. . Average figures for the year were generally most acidic in western Pennsylvania, with levels of 4.02 to 4.14. Eastern Penn sylvania had ranges of 4.14 to 4.26 and central Pennsylvania 4.07 to 4.20. Barbara Hays, chairperson of the Sierra Club’s Allegheny Group, said she was “not surprised” by the finding. Hays said some of the acid rain problem in Pennsylvania is caused by other state’s emissions that drift over the common wealth, but much of it is from in-state power plants that don’t filter out the sulfur dioxide. ; i nation news briefs Police comb mountains for fugitives SPRING CREEK, N.C. (AP) A helicopter equipped with an infrared scanner joined bloodhounds and about 200 police officers yesterday searching the rugged Blue. Ridge Mountains for two fugitives charged with killing a rookie highway patrol trooper. “We’re certain they’re still in the area,” said patrol Sgt. Tom Battle at a command post in the hamlet of Spring Creek. “The area was sealed off so quickly that it’s almost impossible they could have gotten through.” Sgt. George Dowdle identified the two as Jimmy Rios and William Bray, both in their early 20s, who were among five inmates who escaped the Franklin County, Ark., jail in late August. He said they were believed armed with a .22-caliber rifle and the trooper’s .357-Magnum handgun. Trooper Robert L. Coggins, 27, of Bryson City, was shot twice in the head Saturday afternoon after he stopped a pickup truck stolen in Arkansas. Coggins had been a trooper for less than a year. Rios and Bray were charged with murder in warrants issued yesterday, Dowdle said. Minutes before Coggins was shot about 4:30 p.m. on North Carolina highway 209, his 17-year-old fiancee, Linda Justice of Spring Creek, had driven past Coggins and the pickup truck. “He always told her not to stop when he had a car pulled over,” said Justice’s mother, Virginia Justice. “He turned around to wave and she waved back and then she went on.” The trooper’s body was found in the front seat of his car by a county rescue squad worker. world news briefs' Kidnappers want 9 guerrillas freed SAN SALVADOR, El Salvador (AP) A group claiming to hold President Jose Napoleon Duarte’s daughter demands the release of nine jailed guerrillas in return for her freedom, a high official source said yesterday. Six gunmen kidnapped Ines Guadalupe Duarte Duran, 35, and a woman friend last Tuesday, killing one of her bodyguards and wounding another. The source said government officials flew to Mexico on Sunday to make contact with the Farabundo Marti National Liberation Front, the coalition of five leftist guerrilla organizations fighting the U.S.-backed Salvadoran government. “A group that calls itself the Pedro Pablo Castillo Front apparently is claiming to have the daughter,” he said, speaking on condition of anonymity. The Castillo group claims to represent the approximately 4QO political prisoners in Mariona Prison, the principal men’s peni tentiary in El Salvador, the source said. Castillo was a hero of El Salvador’s struggle for independence from Spain, which was achieved in 1821. He died in prison. The source said he did not know which prisoners the rebels wanted in exchange for Mrs. Duarte Duran, but “we assume they want Nidia Diaz and people like that.” Nidia Diaz is a commander of the Revolutionary Central American Workers’ Party, the national communist party, and was part of the rebel delegation at the first round of peace talks with the government Oct. 15,1984, in La Palma. She was wounded and captured in a battle April 18. Britain kicks out six more Soviets LONDON (AP) Britain ordered six more Soviets out of the country yesterday in an escalating series of expulsions of pur ported spies which has plunged Anglo-Soviet relations to one of the lowest points since World War 11. The government accused two Soviet diplomats, two embassy clerks, a trade representive and a journalist of spying and ordered them to leave Britain by Oct. 7. Foreign Secretary Sir Geoffrey Howe said the move was designed “to uphold Britain’s national security.” The government also cut the permitted level of Soviet official personnel in Britain from 211 to 205. The Soviet Embassy in London quickly accused Britain in a statement of a “provocative and vindictive action of an unfriend ly nature” and said it was “totally unjustified on any grounds whatsoever.” It added that “the entire responsibility for the consequences of this action rests with the British side.” Britain last Thursday ordered 25 Russians to leave Britain by Oct. 3, saying they were named as spies by Oleg A. Gordievski, head of the KGB spy network for Britain who defected and was granted asylum. Britain warned against retaliation, but on Saturday the Rus sians expelled 25 Britons, accusing them of spying. In throwing out six more Soviets yesterday, the Foreign Office called the Soviet reprisal “an unwarranted victimization of innocent people, which the British government was not prepared to accept.” Our Type is Your Type Experience the latest in "high tech" computerized typesetting with COMMTYPE Commercial Printing's own integrated system. We will keyboard from your manuscript, or process TELECOMMUNICATED copy transmitted by telephone from your word processor and modem ... and turned around to you in just hours not days. Choose from 100 authentic Mergenthaler "Superfont" type - faces directly on-line in our system. Be assured of quality repros, produced by the most experienced typesetting staff in Central Pennsylvania. Pasteup and other graphic art and design services are also available. COMM7YPE found only at: Ever see a blue resume with a cover letter on white erasable paper tucked into a standard white business envelope? It’s not a pretty sight. At Collegian Production, we offer a professionally typeset and printed resume with a matching letterhead and envelope. Our staff will be happy to offer advice on typography and design. I We have four resume formats, five typefaces and five different types B of paper for printing. I Come see us today and browse through our resume portfolio, in room 126 Carnegie Building. We can help you turn pro. cp collegian |production Resume Service Room 126 Carnegie Building Monday through Friday 8:30 a.m. to 4:30 p.m. or by appointment. 863-3215 BJBPMWIWMII.IH— MI 1935 Collegian Inc. Hthe • to keep you coiieglan dJhJr Ld •on the ball! The Daily Collegian Tuesday, Sept. 17, 1985—5 L Education is an end in itself.