4—The Daily Collegian Wednesday, Nov. 20, 1985 state/nation/world Rescuers mudslide By CARL MANNING Associated Press Writer BOGOTA, Colombia They were told no one was left alive, but the rescuers worked on, filthy and ex hausted. They reported finding 13 more survivors yesterday under the lake of slime that covers Armero’s homes, farms and thousands of dead. The RCN radio network reported the rescue of the 13 people who clung to life despite six days trapped in what had become a stinking, oozing grave for their neighbors. RCN said 22 people were found alive Monday. The mud that rushed down the mountain after the Nevado del Ruiz volcano erupted last Wednesday killed 25,000 people in the verdant Andes valley. “There are no survivors to rescue,” the Colombian Red Cross director, Carlos Martinez, told a news confer ence yesterday. But government offi cials say rescue efforts will continue until they can be certain of that. The economic destruction also was enormous. Agriculture Minister Rob erto Mejia Caicedo said the vast expanse of gray mud covered about 50,000 acres of farmland, and more than 15,000 head of cattle were buried with their owners. Small tremors were recorded yes terday inside the Nevado del Ruiz, which belched fire and. ash that Look What’s Happening at Greyhound THANKSGIVING SPECIAL SERVICE You asked for our Friday Express Service to operate on: Tuesday - November 26th & Wednesday - November 27th YOU GOT IT EASTBOUND EXPRESS SERVICE LV STATE COLLEGE 12:35PM 2:45PM 3:45PM S:OOPM S:3OPM LV. LOT #BO 12:45PM 2:55PM 3:55PM S:IOPM AR. HARRISBURG 4:45PM 7:3OPM AR. KING OF PRUSS 4:IOPM 7:2OPM B:3SPM 9:4OPM AR. PHILADELPHIA 4:45PM 7:55PM 9:OOPM 10:15PM WESTBOUND EXPRESS SERVICE LV. STATE COLLEGE 12:15PM 2:45PM 4:55PM LV. LOT #BO 12:25PM 2:55PM S:OSPM AR. MONROEVILLE 3:ISPM S:4OPM 7:SOPM AR. PITTSBURGH 3:45PM 6:OSPM B:ISPM Sunday return service is available from each of the above locations. Reservations required for Tuesday and Wednesday travel. Call Greyhound for details. Think about it - Can you really afford to trust your time to anyone else this holiday season. 238-7971 GO GREYHOUND AND LEAVE THE DRIVING TO US . . - v„£ - GO GREYHOUND And leave the driving to us. © 1985 Greyhound Lines, Inc, find more survivors melted part of its snowcap and cre ated the mud avalanche that brought chaos to the valley. Scientists monitoring the volcano said they would have to study seismo graph charts and watch for a continu ing pattern of shocks to tell if another eruption is imminent. In Manizales, 25 miles west of the three-mile high volcano on the opposite slope from the major de struction two dozen scientists mon itored the shuddering mountain. Tuesday’s shocks may indicate lava movement inside the volcano, Fred Fischer of the U.S. Geological Survey told The Associated Press. The eruption may have resulted in the lava being pushed along a fault line running under the Nevado del Ruiz, he said, but there are no defi nite signs that another eruption is imminent. Bands of knife-wielding robbers roamed among the hundreds of ca davers on the 15-foot-deep mudflat and among the ruins of houses that were once the town of Armero. Broadcast reports from the valley have told of bandits ripping rings from the fingers of dead bodies and carting away televisions, radios and other household goods. Some bodies have been buried in mass graves, and a few others have been burned, but scores of cadavers remain scattered throughout the val ley. SAFER THAN THE SUN! Italy seeks arrest of Abbas By JOHN WINN MILLER Associated Press Writer GENOA, Italy International arrest warrants have been issued for PLO official Mohammed Abbas and several of his top aides, charging them with murder and kidnapping in the Achille .Lauro hijacking, a prosecutor said yesterday. The United States has accused Abba's, head of a faction of Yasser Arafat’s Palestine Liberation Organi zation, of mastermiftding the Oct. 7-9 Mediterranean ordeal in which an American passenger was killed and thrown overboard. Abbas, whose present whereabouts were not known, previously denied he was involved in the hijacking. At an impromptu news conference, Deputy Prosecu tor Luigi Carli also told reporters that one of the four accused hijackers had admitted killing Leon Klinghof fer of New York City. Carli announced that arrest warrants containing charges of murder and kidnapping have been issued for 16 suspects in the hijacking. The warrants include four Palestinians accused of taking over the ship after it left Genoa, three suspected accomplices who are also in Italian custody and nine whose whereabouts are unknown, Carli said. Abbas and several of his aides in the PLO’s Palestine Liberation Front faction are among the nine fugitives. When reporters asked Carli whether Abbas could be considered the mastermind of the hijacking, he re plied, “Yes, you could say that.” One day earlier a Genoa court convicted five of the suspects in custody on charges of possessing weapons and explosives used in the takeover of the Italian luxury liner, including the four accused hijackers. The five convicted Monday are Youssef Magied al- Molqi; Mohammed Issa Abbas, a close confidant and distant relative of Mohammed Abbas; Ahmed Marrouf al-Assadi; Ibrahim Fatayer Abdel-Latif and Bassam al-Ashker. They were sentenced the same day, receiv ing prison terms ranging from four to nine years. The prosecutor said that al-Molqi, the self-styled leader of the four accused hijackers, had admitted killing Klinghoffer. Carli said the murder and kidnapping warrants for all 16 were issued over a month-long period, the latest last week. The trial based on those warrants will will probably be held next spring and suspects not in custody will be tried in abstentia, he said. Mohammed Abbas, the Palestine Liberation Front leader, helped negotiate an end to the hijacking on Oct. 9 and was with , the four accused hijackers aboard a flight out of Egypt when U.S. jetfighters forced the plane down in Italy. Italian officials said they had no grounds to hold Abbas and allowed him to leave the country, despite U.S. protests. The seven others still at large are: • Abdul-Rahim Khaled, alias Abu Amar, who held the rank of colonel in the Palestine Liberation Front and scouted out the ship on earlier cruises, Carli said. o Ziad al-Omar, a front official who bought tickets in Genoa for the four accused hijackers, according to Carli. • Abu Ali Kazem, one of Mohammed Abbas’ body guards, who accompanied the hijackers in Italy, said Carli. • Abu Kifah and Mohammed al-Khadra, described by Carli as close associates of Mohammed Abbas. The prosecutor said the two men delivered a red Renault 9 carrying automatic rifles and hand grenades to the four hijackers when the car landed in Genoa aboard a ferry from Tunisia. ® Mohammed Jarbua, who Carli said had planned to board the ship with the other hijackers in Genoa. ® Yussef Hisham Nasser, accused by Carli of help ing the hijackers in Italy. Penn Stole Horticulture Club presents Mr. Steve Stones speaking on Interior Plontscoping UU©d., Nov. 20, 1985 at 7:00 pm in 108 Tyson Building Cveryone Welcome!! Refreshments follouuing meeting The CINEMA 1 116 237-7657 RAINBOW BRIGHT AND THE STAR STEALERS „ NIGHTLY: 7:00 BRING ON THE NIGHT™ NIGHTLY: 9:45 Martin Scorsese's AFTER HOURS n NIGHTLY: 8:00,10:00 From The Director Of TO LIVE AND DIE IN L.A. „ NIGHTLY: 7:50,10:00 [SCREENING ROOM 127 S. Pfo«T 238-6005 Jane Fonda AGNES OF GOD Pa NIGHTLY: 7:45,9:45 r STATE 1 128 W. CoH«g« 237-7866 Gene Hackman Matt Dillon TARGETn NIGHTLY: 7:30,9:45 Glenn Close Jeff Bridges JAGGED EDGE n NIGHTLY: 8:00,10:00 '342-1888 lIUPSBURQ; From The Director Of The French Connection TO LIVE AND DIE IN L NIGHTLY: 7:15, 9:15 pass It cn. state news briefs Parents back board's AIDS policy PITTSBURGH (AP) —• Parents and civil rights activists have supported the Pittsburgh School Board’s policy to treat potential AIDS victims on a case-by-case basis and allow most to remain in classrooms and jobs. “This is 1985, not the 13th century. A person infected with AIDS should not be sent to a leper colony,” Ellen Doyle, a parent of two public school children, said at a hearing Monday night. The school policy notes there is no evidence showing acquired immune deficiency syndrome is transmitted by casual contact. The policy, drafted by the district’s AIDS Task Force, would exclude children from normal classes if they might bite or scratch but says parents and school workers would not be told AIDS victims were in school. The policy also calls for monitoring the patient’s condition, with few people to be informed of the illness. Board President Jake Milliones said he expects it will be approved next week. House scuttles major LCB reform HARRISBURG (AP) The fight over the Liquor Control Board’s future took a new turn yesterday, with a House committee erasing a major reform approved by the Senate almost seven weeks ago. The House Liquor Control Committee, on an 18-0 vote, gutted a portion of a Senate bill that would transfer the LCB’s enforcement powers to the attorney general. The Republican-controlled Senate, meanwhile, was poised to approve yet another bill that would transfer enforcement opera tions to the attorney general’s office. < Under a law requiring the periodic review of most state agencies, the LCB will go out of business next year unless the Legislature acts by Dec. 31 to renew it. An escape clause would give lawmakers another year to act if a compromise is not reached. Under an amendmentd introduced by Rep. Terry Punt, the committee would recommend by July 1,1987, what agency should enforce the liquor laws. “We want more time,” said Punt, D-Franklln. “We don’t have the facts.” Goode reveals plan to rebuild police PHILADELPHIA (AP) - Mayor W. Wilson Goode, calling his police department “in crisis” and determined to end “deep seated” corruption, yesterday unveiled a major program aimed at finding a new commissioner to reorganize the 7,000-member force. The police have been hit hard by a four-year-old FBI investiga tion that already has convicted 26 officers, including a deputy police commissioner, of taking bribes to protect illegal gambling and prostitution. The department’s reputation also suffered after its failed assault May 13 on the headquarters of the radical group MOVE. In that confrontation, a bomb dropped from a helicopter killed 11 people and destroyed 61 homes. It led to the resignation last week of Commissioner Gregore Sambor. Goode, who appointed Sambor when he. took office 23 months ago, said he would not be rushed into appointing a successor. “We can’t afford at this time not to have the right person in that job,” Goode told reporters. “My goal is to find the very best person available, whether inside or outside the department.” He said the plan includes selective use of lie detector tests for officers assigned to vice units. Goode also said he had written to District Attorney-elect Ronald Castille to explore the feasibility of creating a unit within the district attorney’s office with jurisdiction over police corruption. nation news briefs Regan: women wouldn't understand WASHINGTON, D.C. (AP) - White House chief of staff Donald Regan struck a nerve Tuesday among feminists outraged by his comment that most women wouldn’t understand the issues at stake at the U.S-Soviet summit in Geneva. Regan said he expects the activities of first ladies Nancy Reagan and Raisa Gorbachev to hold high appeal, especially among women. “They’re not-., going to understand (missile) throw-weights or what is happening in Afghanistan or what is happening in human rights,” Regan told a Washington Post reporter in Geneva on Sunday. “Some women will, but most women believe me, your readers for the most part if you took a poll would rather read the human-interest stuff of what happened.” “Absolutely unbelievable,” said Rep. Patricia Schroeder, D- Colo., a 13-year veteran of the House Armed Services Committee who said she could probably teach Regan a thing or two about defense. “It’s hard not to laugh,” said Irene Natividad, chairwoman of the National Women’s Political Caucus. “All the gender gap polls in ’B4 showed that peace was the No. 1 women’s issue. We’re the ones bearing the sons who would go to war.” White House officials said they had heard no criticism of the remarks. Challenge to nuclear policy rejected SAN FRANCISCO (AP) A federal appeals court yesterday rejected a computer manager’s suit seeking to prohibit a U.S. policy of “launch-on-warning” the firing of nuclear missiles when computers show the nation is under nuclear attack. The suit was filed by Clifford Johnson, a computer manager at Stanford University’s Information Technology Services, and backed by a group called Computer Professionals for Social Responsibility. They contended the United States and its allies have been developing launch-on-warning capability, which they said would allow a nuclear war to be “declared” by computers violating the constitutional responsibilities of Congress and the president and endangering international peace in violation of the United Nations Charter. The suit did not say the policy has been implemented, but said it was implied in the U.S. deployment in Europe of Pershing II missiles, which can reach the Soviet Union in minutes. Judges Warren Ferguson, William Norris and Charles Wiggins of the 9th U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals said that since Johnson did not claim launch-on-warning had been adopted as official policy, his suit raises only an abstract question and must be dismissed. The Defense Department has denied that launch-on-warning is official policy but has refused to say whether the technology is being developed. world news briefs Huricane Kate sweeps SAN JUAN, Puerto Rico (AP) The 100 mph winds of Hurricane Kate knocked out telephones, electricity, gas and television in Cuba yesterday and sent nine-foot waves crashing into the Havana waterfront. Tens of thousands of people were reported evacuated. First reports received by telephone in Puerto Rico said there were no known fatalities, but damage to Havana, the capital city of 2 million, could be extensive. The storm hit Havana about 1:30 p.m., two hours before it had been expected. Civil defense authorities on Tuesday afternoon evacuated areas in Havana expected to be hit hardest. News reports said 138,000 people had been evacuated throughout the island. Schools were closed in all of Cuba’s 14 provinces, as Kate’s winds cut off electricity, gas, and most telephone service in Havana. President Fidel Castro ordered all civil defense personnel on alert for “possible widespread damage,” the news reports said. into Cuba As a Marine Officer, you could be in charge of a Mach 2+ F/A-18A, a vertical take-off Harrier or one of our other jets or helicopters. And you could do it by the time you’re 23. But it takes a special leaders at /els. teach you to be one. If you’re $l5 OFF ALL 10K GOLD 3&- Z One week only, save on the gold ring of your choice. For complete details, see your Jostens representative at Monday 11/18 - Friday 11/22 Go farther... faster. For more information , call Lt Hough at 814-237-8578. Graduated Savings. Venn State tßooK^tore Owned and Operated by the Pennsylvania State University Payment plans available. ©1985 Jostens, Inc JOSTENS AMERICA'S COLLEGE RING'“ iiiiii ill pi Hi mill HU $3O OFF ALL 14K GOLD a freshman or sophomore, ask about our under- graduate officer commissioning programs. If you’re a junior, check out our graduate programs. 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