6—The Daily Collegian Thursday, Sept. 19,1985 state/nation/world n Expires 9/19/85 1 FREE DELIVERY DAILY Starting at 11 a.m. 234-0182 LA VIE 1986 proudly announces its FIRST ANNUAL C C*NPIO CO N t £ST Saturday, September 21, 1985 9 a.m. to 12 noon Curtain Road, In front of IM Building Before the PSU V. East Carolina Game THE BEST PHOTOS SELECTED WILL APPEAR IN LA VIE 'B6 Groups of Students can compete in 3 categories: * Best Penn State Spirit * Funniest * Most Outrageous Don't miss this chance to be in your yearbook! FOCUSING ON VOU LA VIC 'B6 0218 fizza Tf i I I 1 ‘Whole wheat dough available 1 FREE 32 oz. drink with any Stromboli fmn IT Wear your PiZZfTTT T-Shirt into the store and get 1 free one coupon per Help! The homecoming ’B5 committee needs your convertibles on Oct. 25 IF you're williNq to clonate youe convertUjle car For a Few liours please contact Erlc Craves or Bob Slkjster at 865-5455 or stop by ThE IFC office at 501 B HUB S. Africa guerrillas By JAMES F. SMITH Associated Press Writer JOHANNESBURG, South Africa - The statement warned Angola not to Nearly 500 South African-led troops interfere with the new incursion have pushed into Angola to attack against SWAPO. several hundred black guerrillas Since South African forces com fighting for South-West Africa’s inde- pleted their withdrawal in May, it pendence, the military said yester- rapidly became obvious that Angola s j a y forces not only provided SWAPO with Spokesmen also said warplanes logistical help, but also informed staged an air strike on the guerrillas’ them of (South African) security forward command post near the vil- force actions,” the Defense Force lage of Nehone, 60 miles into southern said. Angola. There was no immediate This was the second South African word on casualties. raid into Angola in 10 weeks. On June But Defense Minister Pedro Maria 30 and July 1, South African troops Tonha of Angola challenged the South killed 57 SWAPO guerrillas in a quick African version and said the real operation across the border. purpose of the incursion was to aid The United States and other West the beleaguered rebel movement ern governments condemned the new fighting to overthrow the Marxist ra j c j ) but the South African Broad- Angolan government. Tonha said the cas ting Corp. replied in an editorial, South-African backed rebels were “There is no alternative except sur under heavy fire from an Angolan ren( j er to the revolutionaries. Wheth offensive. er the destroyers are bush terrorists The Reagan administration urged or ur ban radicals engaging in action South Africa to withdraw its forces. t 0 ma ke the country ungovernable, State Department spokesman Ber- they have to be answered on their nard Kalb said in Washington that the own t erms .” administration is “not sympathetic to The united States is one of five South African assertions of any right countr i es trying to negotiate a cease to conduct military expeditions into fire in the N am ibian war. But talks Angola under the theory of defending haye broken down over South Afri its illegal presence in Namibia." ca - s insistence, backed by the Rea- In Pretoria, Defense Force head- gan administration, that Angola send quarters gave details for the first home an estimated 25,000 Cuban time on the three-day-old operation. t sas a con dition for Namibian It said 12 units of about 40 men each independence, were pursuing 400 to 800 guerrillas in South Afric ' a se i ze d the territory a battalion of the South-West Africa during World War I and has ignored People’s Organization. SWAPO has y reS olutions demanding it with fought since 1966 from bases in south- draw ern Angola to end South African rule ' nti over South-West Alriea, ale. called ef “?n this oueration the security Angola (UNITA), led by Jonas Sa forces Intend to find these members uMTAsKmi - *ss. stresses*- £d Angola from Us base at the village of and ammunition stores. Jam a ‘ Air Force planes conducted search Tonha, in a statement issued missions to aid the ground troops, through the official Angolan News ) which include both South Africans Agency monitored in Lisbon, said a and local Namibian forces, the total of 18 South African warplanes statement said. had bombed Angolan Army positions The Defense Force accused the at Mavinga, 150 miles north of the Angolan army of aiding the SWAPO Namibian border. strikes in Angola guerrillas in violation of a February 1984 accord that ended a South Afri- can occupation of southern Angola. state news briefs Committee votes to keep LCB HARRISBURG (AP) A Senate committee recommended yesterday that the Legislature maintain Pennsylvania’s 51-year old state store system but strip the Liquor Control Board of its enforcement powers. The Senate Law and Justice Committee voted 6-3 in favor of the recommendations, which were drafted after the panel heard nearly 90 witnesses during six days of hearings. The vote by the Republican-controlled committee was counter to Gov. Dick Thornburgh’s stance that the LCB and state store system should be abolished. Thornburgh has called the agency corrupt and state stores obsolete. "I feel a little like a disciple who attended the Last Supper. I’ve been vindicated,” said Sen. Robert J. Mellow, D-Lackawanna, a supporter of the state store system. i “I hope we can now put to rest the issue of divestiture and get on with the issue of reform,” he said But Sen. Richard A. Tilghman, R-Montgomery, one of three Republicans to vote against the recommendations, said the vote will have little impact on the anti-LCB movement. “This is a skirmish. The battle is ahead of us,” he said. The LCB is one of 28 state agencies to undergo a “sunset review” in the 1985-86 legislative session. Under the law, the LCB will cease operations Dec. 31 unless legislation is approved to continue its existence. nation news briefs AIDS infiltrates the U.N. UNITED NATIONS (AP) Eight U.N. staff members in New York have had AIDS in the last four years and four of them have died, the organization’s chief medical officer reported yesterday. Dr. Michael Irwin denied rumors that scores of U.N. employees were afflicted with the often deadly disease. He said: “I wish to point out that medical reporting system of the United Nations is, of course, of the highest accuracy. ’ ’ In a statement, Irwin said the cases were being treated with confidentiality and he could not comment on any particular case. He said there was no one with AIDS currently working at the United Nations But he added: “There is no policy to bar such persons from working if they are physically able to perform their normal duties,” Irwin said in the statement read to reporters by U.N. spokesman Francois Giuliani. Belushi had very high heroin levels LOS ANGELES (AP) The amount of heroin found in comedian John Belushi was as deadly as 10 bullets in the brain, a pathologist testified yesterday in the preliminary hearing of the woman accused of administering the lethal dose. Dr. Michael Baden, deputy chief medical examiner in New York City, said not only was the heroin deadly, but the presence of cocaine contributed to Belushi’s death on March 5, 1982, in a bungalow at the Chateau Marmont Hotel. “If I might, I would compare it with being shot in the brain 10 times,” Baden said. “One wound might be enough to kill you, but there are still many others.” The hearing is being held to determine if there’s enough evidence against Cathy Evelyn Smith for a trial. Miss Smith is charged with second-degree murder and 13 counts of furnishing heroin and cocaine A former back-up singer to Hoyt Axton and Gordon Lightfoot, • Miss Smith was quoted in the National Enquirer as saying she repeatedly injected Belushi with a “speedball,” a mixture of cocaine and heroin, before his death. Baden, who had examined the Los Angeles coroner’s report along with tissue samples and photographs of Belushi, agreed with previous testimony as to the cause of the comic’s death. U.S. subsidizing Soviet build-up WASHINGTON, D.C (AP) The Soviets have been much more successful than previously thought in stealing Western technolo gy and as a result, “we are subsidizing the military buildup of the Soviet Union," Defense Secretary Caspar W. Weinberger said yesterday. . Weinberger released a study asserting the Soviets have tar geted specific American defense contractors and universities; are acquiring thousands of technical reports that are not classi fied but are useful, and are diverting high-tech equipment designed for one purpose but which can be used in weapons programs. “By their own estimate, more than 5,000 Soviet military research projects each year are benefiting significantly from Western acquired technology,” Weinberger said at a news confer ence. The report said that while comprehensive figures are not available, the Soviets estimate they saved at least $640 million in 1980 alone on selected military research projects by obtaining Western technology. Neither Weinberger nor Assistant Defense Secretary Richard Perle, who later briefed reporters on the study, would elaborate on the sources used to measure the Soviet effort. But the report, said Perle, should lead to efforts by the United States to “even up” the number of Soviet diplomats allowed to operate here compared with the Americans in the Soviet Union. world news briefs Garbo turns 80, STOCKHOLM, Sweden (AP) Greta Garbo, the reclusive movie star who turned 80 yesterday, said she is homesick for Sweden and hinted she is “tired of being Garbo,” according to a Swedish magazine publisher who said he obtained the first interview with her since 1927. Sven Broman, 63, a Garbo biographer and magazine publisher, said Garbo is homesick for her native Sweden but “fears the commotion that would follow on her return after years of absence. “She wants to be left alone,” the Swedish journalist told reporters in the town of Malmo in southern Sweden. Broman promised he would tell more of his recent talks with Garbo in a nationally broadcast tribute to her last night. He said he had three sessions and spoke for hours last month with the star of films such as “Camille,” “Mata Hari,” and “Ninotchka.” “It was the event of my life," he said of the interviews he conducted at an unidentified alpine hotel in the German-speaking part of Switzerland. Garbo, a United States citizen since 1951, divides her time between homes in New York and Switzerland. Seven Soviets meet in space MOSCOW (AP) Three Soviet cosmonauts docked their Soyuz T-14 spacecraft with the orbiting manned Salyiit 7 space station yesterday, the official news agency, Tass, reported. Tass said the two cosmonauts who have been aboard the station for more than three months will leave the orbiting lab and return to Earth, but it did not say when. The docking look place at i0:15 a.m. EDT, Tass said. About three hours later the three cosmonauts entered the space station after post-docking checks wdre carried out. The Soyuz T-14 spacecraft Was launched on Tuesday with cosmonauts Vladimir Vasyutih, Georgy Grechkb and Alexander Volkov aboard. ■. The other cosmonauts, Vladimir Dzhanibekov and Viktor Savinykh, have been aboard the Salyut 7 since June 8. They were sent aloft to carry out repairs when the lab was drifting out of control due to electrical faults. speaks to press THE INSURANCE CLUB presents MR. 808 SZEYLLER of the Pennsylvania Financial Group Thursday, September 19, 7:30 p.m. at 4 Triangle 226 E. Beaver Ave. ALL ARE WELCOME 0102 Some mornings are better than others. Read a Collegian and face reality MgWM EXPERIENCED PIZZA g frv" pizza Special A Large Pizza for only (/) DC Ul > Coil 238-3112 41.8 Cloy Lone < m BC 30 S w DRIVERS WANTED DRIVERS DRIVERS WANTED daily Collegian Freshmen and Sophomores Majoring in Electrical Engineerlng...Computer Science'...Languages. This is your chance to find out about a unique opportunity to earn while you learn, through the National Security Agency’s COOPERATIVE EDUCATION PROGRAM. In case you haven’t heard, NSA plays an impor tant role in analyzing foreign signals, safeguarding our government's vital communications and secur ing government computer systems. Through NSA’s Co-op Program, you’ll gain valuable experience in your major field, while performing work that is uni quely important. To make sure your learning experience is continually challenging, NSA varies your work assignment with each work period. Here are a few examples of what you could be doing: Electrical Engineering. Design and development, test and evaluation of electronic communications systems. Your multi-disciplinary assignments may extend to such rapidly advancing areas as optics, lasers, acoustics and micro-processors. qigwnin Analysis. Limited opportunities for students majoring in Electrical Engineering and Physics. Assignments include identification and classification of electro-magnetic emissions, radar systems, telemetry, beacon signals and trajectory data. Computer Science. Opportunities include applica tions programming, design and implementation of software systems such as data base management . systems, real time systems, management informa tion systems, networking and distributed processing systems. Languages. You must be majoring in a Slavic, Near-Eastern or Asian language. Work experiences include translation, reporting and analysis. Don’t miss this opportunity to be part of a learn ing experience that is unlike any other. Contact your Co-op Program Coordinator for an appointment to talk with an NSA representative. NSA will be on campus for interviews Friday, Oct. 4. Contact Shirl Henry at 863-0225 to schedule an interview. An evening information session will be held at 7:00 p.m. on Thursday, October 3. See the Place ment Office for details. Unheard'of Career Opportunities NATIONAL SECURITY AGENCY ATTN: M322(N) Fort Meade, MD 20755-6000 TLS. Citizenship required. Minimum GPA-3.0 (on a 4.0 scale). An equal opportunity empioyer. The Daily Collegian Thursday, Sept. 19,1985—7 *4.50 Free Delivery Penn State’s morning newspaper MAKER o 33 Tfi,,,,.. \ < m 30 to M «S§
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