4—The Daily Collegian Monday, Nov. 4, 1985 state/nation/world U.S. plot against Khadafy reported By The Associated Press ' WASHINGTON, D.C. Presi dent Reagan yesterday ordered an investigation into the leak of intel ligence documents disclosed in a published report saying Reagan authorized the CIA to undermine the Libyan leader Moammar Kha dafy's government. White House spokesman Bill Hart, who at first had refused to comment on the report in yester day's editions of The Washington Post, said the president ordered the probe "in an effort to deter mine who is responsible for (the) disclosure and to take appropriate action." Hart refused to say what appro priate action might entail or whether the investigation would include the use of lie detector tests on people with access to the classi fied documents. Nor would he directly confirm the existence or credibility of the documents quoted by the Post. The report quoted unidentified government sources as saying Reagan this fall authorized the Central Intelligence Agency to support covert operations to un dermine the Khadafy regime, which has been a thorn in the side to Reagan and his predecessors. Reagan, returning to the White House from a weekend at his Camp David retreat in Maryland, ignored reporters' shouted ques tions about the report. "We do not comment on alleged The Geosciences Club presents • Tony Carts Geophysicist for AMOCO Inc. speaking on :Careers in Geophysics" Monday, Nov. 4 541 Deike, 7:30 p.m. Road DAILY SPECIALS!! 11111111,11111•11111111111111MINI11111111111•111111111111.11111 11 1 11111111111111111111111111111111111111 MM INIE Buy any 12" 1-item pizza and 2 Pepsis' for only 5 5.00 Good only 11AM-3PM one coupon per pizza Expires 11/6/85 1 L North: 237-1414 South: 234-5655 m , i I 01985 Domino's Pizza, Incl 104 N. Atherton 421 Rear E. Beaver Ave. ® ® our drivers carry less than $2O limited delivery area II . II a offer good only at participating locationslll I customer pays applicable sales tax 66G55 linmissiummoilimislossommumommumusasininsmsommummomminsamisommommemeemil intelligence activity or intelli gence activities," Hart told re porters, reading from a prepared statement. "In general, the presi dent is very concerned over the unauthorized disclosure of intelli gence and classified information." "While in no way attributing any credence to the specific allega tions and conclusions drawn in the Washington Post article," he added, "the president is ordering an investigation of the disclosure of the U.S. intelligence documents cited in this news report in an effort to determine who is respon sible for such disclosure and to take appropriate action." The Post report said the ClA's plan involves assisting one or more. of Libya's neighbors in North Africa and the Middle East that oppose Khadafy. Both the chairman and vice chairman of the Senate Intelli gence committee, Dave Duren berger, R-Minn., and Patrick J. Leahy, D-Vt., wrote Reagan ex pressing their opposition to the plan, the Post said. The newspaper also reported that a narrow majority of the members of both the House and Senate intelligence panels sup ported the president's decision. According to the report, the ob ject of the plan is to disrupt and frustrate Khadafy's subversive and terrorist plans and perhaps to lure him into some foreign adven ture or terrorist exploit. Penn State Bub Chops Meatball Monday $1 off on 18" Meatball Hoagie . Offer expires Nov. 4th South Africa restricts riot coverage By The Associated Press JOHANNESBURG, South Africa A senior government official yesterday accused some for eign correspondents of "unprofessional and uneth ical" behavior in reporting new restrictions on riot coverage the day before they were formally an nounced. . Louis Nel, head of the Bureau of Information in the Foreign Ministry, said some senior member of the Foreign Correspondents Association broke a promise of confidence in using material from his courtesy briefing Friday, a day before the govern ment announced the news restrictions. "A public explanation has become imperative," Nel said. He did not identify the news organizations that he claimed broke the embargo. Marcos announces new elections soon MANILA, Philippines (AP) President Ferdinand E. Marcos, fac ing mounting U.S. criticism and a growing insurgency at home, said yesterday he is willing to hold elec- tions within three months to settle questions of his popularity "Well I understand the opposition has been asking for an election. In answer to their request, I announce Marcos first hinted in August that that lam ready to call a snap election he might call an early election after perhaps earlier than eight months, opposition lawmakers in the National perhaps three months or less," Mar- Assembly announced they would seek cos said on ABC-TV's "This Week' his impeachment for Corruption. With David Brinkley." When the governing party crushed ABC producer Bill Thomas said the impeachment measure, Marcos Marcos told him after the interview dropped the idea of early balloting, here that the election could be held saying a government-sponsored sur- Jan. 17, the anniversary of the 1981 vey showed a majority of Filipinos lifting of eight years of martial law. wanted him to finish his term until But Marcos said an exact date for the 1987. proposed election was not expected Opposition leaders welcomed the before next week, Thomas added. announcement, and said former Sen. Marcos said he would like the elec- Salvador Laurel or Corazon Aquino, tion to be for president only, adding the widow of assassinated former offer good with this ad 234-4 SUB The new rules prohibit television and radio crews and photographers from recording violence in 38 cities and towns, which are under state-of emergency regulations, without the permission of the police commissioner. In London, the Rev. Jesse Jackson said the new media restrictions in South Africa will mean increased killings. • "You can be asssured that as the lights go out in South Africa, the killings will go up without a body count," said Jackson, an American black activist in a sermon at St. James' Church: "This indeed constitutes an escalation of the reign of terror of the Botha (South African Presi dent P.W. Botha) regime. Television has not shot one child in South Africa." Nel also criticized a statement by the foreign correspondents Saturday that called, the new ban that the vice presidency could be decided in May, when local elections are scheduled, or later, according to Thomas. "All this childish claims to popular ity on both sides have to be settled," said Marcos, 68 and in power. 20 years. The Leading Edge Model "D" Personal Computer Full IBM Compatibility. $l4OO Complete. See the Model "D" soon at : i sirzsico 222 W. College Ave Free Parking 234-3586 *Special Student & University Pricing Available t<aJing 141ge is a uadcnuil of l'nducic, Inc.IBM cgnicir lad u A Iniciiuiwnal Iluflnc.c hlachinc~Cp n Sen. Benigno Aquino, could oppose Marcos. "A snap election . . . is about the best thing that can happen to this country," Assemblyman Homobono Adaza said, and could remove Mar U.S. rep. warns against vote fraud WASHINGTON, D.C. (AP) A leading congressional critic of the Philippine government said new elec tions announced yesterday by Presi dent Ferdinand Marcos could drive his democratic opponents into the communist camp if the balloting is "fraught with fraud." Rep. Stephen Solarz, D-N.Y., chair man of the House Foreign Affairs subcommittee that deals with Asia, said in a statement that "the ultimate significance of the election depends on whether it would be genuinely free and fair." the start of a slide toward a totally controlled press. The comment "is both untrue and unfair corn mentary," Nel said. He also attacked a Foreign Correspondents Association comment that said it Was absurd to blame the media for the "profund social conflict" that has lasted more than a year in which at least 800 people have perished. "Nobody said that television cameras or crews are responsible (but rather) that in unrest situa tions, the presence of TV and camera crews had proved to be a catalyst for further violence," Nel said. He called the correspondents' remark "a further example of the unprofessional intermingling of commentary and half-truths to the detriment of South Africa." cos from power. Marcos, dismissing allegations that he was responsible for massive voter fraud in previous elections, said members of the U.S. Congress would be invited to observe the election. "The restoration of democracy is essential if the communist challenge is to be turned back," he added. "A genuinely free and fair election would be essential, but a fraudulent election would be worse than none at all." The White House and State Depart ment would not comment on the elec tion plan. "Everything depends on how the election is conducted," Solarz said. He called for a reconstitution of the Philippine election commission to ensure that "a clear majority of its members are independent." state news briefs New MOVE charges may be filed PHILADELPHIA (AP) Little chance exists of the city filing criminal homicide charges in the fatal MOVE confrontation with police, but investigators also are studying the possibility of several other charges, according to District Attorney Edward Rendell. Rendell said Saturday investigators were focusing on the four children who died in the MOVE house May 13 and not on the seven adults in trying to determine if evidence warranted charges of risking a catastrophe or reckless endangerment. The U.S. attorney's office in Philadelphia also is investigating the MOVE confrontation to determine if the victims' civil rights were violated. In addition, the Philadelphia Special Investigations Commission, which Mayor W. Wilson Goode appointed, has been holding hearings since Oct. 6 in an attempt to unravel the events. The commission has no power to indict, however. When the hearings resume Tuesday, renowned pathologist Dr. Ali Hameli is scheduled to testify, and several sources close to the commission told The Philadelphia Inquirer he is expected to challenge the findings of the Philadelphia medical examiner's office and rule the deaths homicide rather than accidental. The sources emphasized that the word homicide, when used by a pathologist, does not necessarily carry a criminal implication but indicates the victim died at the hands of another person. Rendell said that to charge any of the city participants with homicide, prosecutors would have to prove that actions by the city caused the children's deaths. LCB raids fraternity parties INDIANA (AP) Agents for the Liquor Control Board con ducted a rare raid on six Indiana University of Pennsylvania fraternities over the weekend, breaking up parties and confiscating kegs of beer. The agents, armed with search warrants, charged several fraternity presidents with selling alcohol without a license a misdemeanor punishable by fines. LCB spokesman Robert. Ford said agents are eying fraternities "across the state" for charging admission to parties where beer and liquor are served. Fraternity members said search warrants revealed that under cover LCB agents visited parties at the various houses in October by using lUP student identification cards. A raid party swooped down upon the Delta Chi house at about 11:30 p.m. Friday, ending the party abruptly. Thomas Halligan, Delta's rush chairman, said the raid party blocked all the exits and shouted "no one leave." "They came in like an army. They busted in and took control," he said. While Halligan acknowledged that charging admission to parties is "definitely illegal," he also said the practice is common throughout the country. nation news briefs U.S. to scrap minority hiring quotas NEW YORK (AP) The chairman of the U.S. Civil Rights Commission said yesterday that he expects President Reagan to adopt a new executive order on hiring that abolishes preferential treatment for women and minorities. The Cabinet is reportedly split over the proposal by Attorney General Edwin Meese 111 to eliminate numerical hiring goals imposed on companies doing business with the government. Clarence Pendleton, who as chairman of the Civil Rights Com mission has been a strong supporter of Reagan's civil rights policies, denied that there was any dissenOon in the Cabinet. "I think ieg`going to be clear that the're's going to be an order signed where there won't be any preferential treatment, and where statistical imbalance in the workforce will not trigger a finding of discrimination," Pendleton said in an interview on the CBS-TV program "Face the Nation." Executive Order 11246 was issued by President Lyndon Johnson and revised in 1971 by President Richard Nixon to authorize the Labor Department to impose numerical hiring goals on govern ment contractors. "What Ronald Reagan would like to do is take the executive order back to the same level it was when Lyndon Johnson signed it on Sept. 28, 1965," Pendleton said. Eleanor Holmes Norton, former chairwoman of the Equal Employment Opportunities Commission, said she believed Reagan and his administration want to take civil rights policies back further than 1965. "They are lost in the 19505," she said world news briefs 2 French agents guilty AUCKLAND, New Zealand (AP) Two French secret agents early today pleaded guilty to manslaughter in the July 10 sinking of the Greenpeace flagship Rainbow Warrior. The change in the charge from murder to the lesser charge of manslaughter came as a suprise to spectators in the crowded courtroom. Maj. Alain Mafart and Capt. Dominique Prieur pleaded guilty to the charges of manslaughter and wilfull damage in the sinking of the ship in which a Greenpeace photographer, Fernando Pereira from the Netherlands, was killed. There is no set penalty for manslaughter, and the two agents will be ordered before the High Court for sentencing. Some legal observers said the government's decision to accept the pleas to the lesser charges indicated it might deport the couple. Mafart and Prieur had been charged with murder, arson and conspiracy. Prime Minister David Lange had said yesterday that the couple probably had no physical connection with blowing up the Rainbow Warrior that was blasted by two mines while docked in Auckland harbor. The Rainbow Warrior was to have led a flotilla to protest French nuclear tests at Mururoa atoll in the South Pacific. Guatemala, Argentina hold elections (AP) Guatemalans voted yesterday to choose a civilian president they hope will end military rule and pave the way for increased economic aid from the United States. It was this Central American nation's first civilian election in 16 years. Eight civilian candidates ran for president. The military which has run the government since 1970 through a series of governments is expected to turn over power Jan. 14. Vinicio Cerezo Arevalo, 42, of the Christian Democratic Party, and Jorge Carpio Nicolle, 52, of the Union of the National Center were considered the leading candidates. Neither was expected to get the required 50 percent plus one vote needed for victory. If needed, a runoff between the top two contenders would take place Dec. 8. Meanwhile, President Raul Alfonsin's center-left Radical Civic Union headed for a convincing victory in Argentina's first interim congressional elections in 20 years. With 17 percent of the total nationwide vote counted in balloting for the House of Deputies, the Radical Civic Union led with 1,158,013 votes or 45 percent of the total. • The main opposition, the labor-based Peronist Party, had 703,301 votes for 27 percent. The leftist Intransigent Party had 140,418 votes for 5 percent and the conservative Central Democratic Union 124,- 928 votes, also about 5 percent. The remaining votes were divided among several small parties. The outcome of the elections, the first ever held here under a state of siege, is seen as a referendum on Alfonsin's policies. He declared the siege Oct. 25 in a crackdown on a small group of militant rightists. in bombing STUDENT SPECIAL one automatic speedwash for only $2 with this coupon University Drive Car Wash (next to C.C. Peppers) present coupon & I.d. otter expires 111301.85 BARGAIN NIGHT MONDAY . : & TUESDAY . . ` ` AT AT ALL ',THEATRE S ALL SEAT 1.00 THE'.:OVIE.S.:'-' . '....:':: - .. 407 E. !kayo 237-0003 From The Director Of TO LIVE AND DIE IN LA. NIGHTLY: 7:50, 10:00 SCREENING.RO.OM Stephen King Makes Evil An Event In: SILVER BULLET R NIGHTLY: 7:45, 9:45 Charles Bronson: Bringing Justice To The Streets DEATH WISH 3. NIGHTLY: 7:45, 9:45 Glenn Close Jeff Bridges • JAGGED EDGER NIGHTLY: 8:00, 10:00 EMI= Gary Busey In Stephen King's SILVER BULLET NIGHTLY: 7:15, 9:15 . _ ..r• •• . .. • ...• • ....,. ~...-: .. ~ . „... ~ ... . . . . ~ . .. • . -. ~, ~....... .... .... 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No one under the age of 30 has ever lived free from the threat of nuclear war. Millions believe that they will die in a nuclear war within the next ten years. There comes a time in history when young people must take a stand and become the conscience of the nation. Students can make the difference. On March Ist, 1986, you can take a stand by being one of five thousand people who will leave schools, homes, jobs, and families to walk from Los Angeles to Washington, D.C. We will walk 15 miles a day. 255 days. 3,235 miles. Our one goal: global nuclear disarmament Nothing less. We need you to rrake it happen. We need you to create a citizens movement so massive that world leaders will have no choice but to abolish nuclear weapons. If you're eighteen or over, in good physical condition, and ready to devote nearly a year of your life to peace, then step forward. Help turn hope into history. 238.2220 (Heritage Oaks, Toftrees Park Forest) 41 • • • I IF FloßidA Ciriws ORANQES Box INAvEIs $14.00 2) Hamlinfs 10.50 I 7 ) TANVIOS 12.00 GRApEfRIIiT I 4 ) WhirE $9.00 5) PiNk 9.50 IFRUIT BASkETS LuicE (1 pk.)-$9.50 M al 7) SmAll ('h pk.);8.00 ' A s k . ` ll ll • Voice your opinion about PORNOGRAPHIC MOVIES on campus at an OPEN FORUM Nov. 4 - 7t09 pm - 316 HU * Student opinion will directly affect the USG Senate's decision concerning future involvement with the Movie Co-op. UNDERGRADUATE STUDENT GOVERNMENT Be the generation to abolish nuclear weapons everywhere. ~.:•.::::::„..,..:,:„.. G ;:., :; ~..i , ...:.....: . .„: „ ..• PEACE MARCII ea -. .• .•:,.. ._.1.-crttvatgi, item or _pon) one coupon per customer 1 / 2 Box $B.OO 6.00 7.00 $5.00 5.00 Join The Great Peace March. The Great Peace March YES! Card ❑ Yes! I want to march. Send me an application. ❑ Yes! I want to get academic credit for marching. Send me information. ❑ Yes! Enclosed is my contribution of: 0 $lOO 0 $5O ❑ $25 ❑ Other $ ❑ Yes! I want to help. Please contact me. Name Address _ Daytime phone ( ) Mail to PRO-Peace 8150 Beverly Blvd., Suite 203, Los Angeles, CA 90048. (213) 653-6245 Please make checks payable to PRO-Peace. Your contributions are tax deductible z zis heat dough available ecial On For Size ... COIINATE FFA CITRUS FRUIT SALE FRUIT ARRIVES: Nov. 26Th SALE ENdS: Nov. 7Th AddRESS ORdER OVANTiTy: Look for the Great Peace March representative on campus today. The Daily Collegian Monday, Nov. 4, • IZaW T-SHIRT Offer good at both locatio rizzarnorth delivery to Herit Oaks, Toftrees, Park Fore _State __Evening phone ( )_ RETURN TO 106 ARmsby
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