ire Championship Contenders By CHRIS LODER Collegian Staff Writer When they began two-a day practice sessions during the sweltering months of summer, the men’s soc cer team and the football team set out to forget about last year. Both were expected to do well in 1984, but both stumbled and fell disap pointingly short. For the football team, 1984 was a season of frustration. For the sec ond time in Head Coach Joe Pater no’s 20-year reign, the Lions failed to make a bowl game. There was some talk that the fire was not in Paterno’s belly anymore. The men’s soccer team, on the other hand, played well during the regular season last year, but a loss in the Mid-Atlantic regional finals of the National Collegiate Athletic Association sidetracked a trip to the national championship and a successful season. This year is a different story. The men’s soccer team and the football team have a shot at winning a lance national championship in their re spective sports. The football team is ranked No. 1 with a date in the Orange Bowl against Oklahoma on Jan. 1. Meanwhile, the soccer team bounced back from a slow start with some outstanding play in the latter half of the season, including Saturday’s heart-stopping 6-5 win in double overtime over Temple. The team now faees top-ranked Evansville in the quarterfinals of the NCAA playoffs. For both, 1985 is a season of redemption. The Penn State football team was not supposed to do well in 1985. Many critics said the Lions would finish with another 6-5 record. The Lions were ranked No. 17 in the preseason poll by the Associated Press a token gesture consid ering Penn State’s football tradi tion. Saying “I want to win another war,” Paterno rallied his troops. He worked his players hard during the off-season, harder than he has ever before. In their first game, the Lions battled what many considered to be the No. 1 team in the country Maryland. But, the Lions fought back a stiff challenge and beat the Terrapins 20-18. After a series of close calls, the Lions received respect by trounc ing West Virginia and gained the top spot in the polls with a win over Cincinnati. The Lions closed out the season with two impressive peformances: a 36-6 thrashing over Notre Dame and a 31-0 romp over Pittsburgh. The soccer team struggled in the beginning of the season. After a couple of poor performances, the Lions found themselves with their backs against the wall. They had five losses, and a sixth would knock them out of the playoff picture. Penn State rebounded with a 3-2 upset over then-undefeated Con necticut and went on to go unde feated in its last six games. Now as icy winter winds descend upon central Pennsylvania, two new national championships may bring warmth to Happy Valley. Both the Nittany Lion soccer and football-teams are looking toward na tional championships this year. This week’s Freelance captures some of the Lions’ special moments on the road to victory. Clockwise from top left: Jay Ruby and Steve Potter em brace after winning Saturday’s playoff game against Temple. Michael Zor dich, one of the football team’s tri captains, leads players in pre-game stretches at Pitt Stadium Saturday. Steve Potter goes through two defend ers in the second round of NCAA playoffs against Temple. Players show excitement while huddling around D.J Dozier after Penn State’s second touchdown against Pitt. Ruby shows the soccer team’s superior ability to out play Temple. The Daily Collegian Tuesday, Nov. 26, 1985 iti i, i%£ •'t »' / 2 favorites lead Honduran election By ANDREW SELSKY Associated Press Writer TEGUCIGALPA, Honduras (AP) Two fa vored candidates predicted victory in this Central American country’s presidential election, and early unofficial returns showed them outpacing the seven other contenders. Returns broadcast over national television late Sunday indicated that Jose Azcona Hoyo of the Liberal Party and Rafael Leonardo Callejas of the National Party were pulling in far more votes than the other candidates. Pre-election polls had picked the two as the top vote-getters. No running tally was kept by television network officials as local representatives telephoned re sults to the network from voting precincts. The election computing center was slow to release even unofficial tallies, and the count could last through today. Shortly before the polls closed, Azcona Hoyo said, “All of the reports from the interior of the country indicate that we have won.” But Callejas predicted he would receive at least 20 percent more votes than his closest rival. Both candidates are moderates and advocate strong ties with the United States. The winner will succeed President Roberto Suazo Cordova on Jan. 27, who is barred by the constitution from running for a second term. A peaceful electoral transition from one civilian president to another would be the first in Honduras since 1929. There are 4 million people in this Church envoy arrives in NY to discuss US hostages By LARRY McSHANE Associated Press Writer .1! i NEW YORK - Terry Waite, the Anglican church envoy who nas been negotiating for the release of four kidnapped Americans in Lebanon, arrived yesterday for talks with U.S. officials and relatives of the hostages and said the captives were alive and well. \ & “The situation is highly volatile,” Waite said at a news conference at an Episcopal Church center. “I’m not being overly dramatic when I say one loose word misinterpreted can cost lives of the hostages or my life.” He said he was “quietly optimistic” about the release of four Americans, but said he knew nothing about the fate of two other American hostages. The kidnappers have not made any demands, Waite said, adding that he would like to meet with Kuwaiti offi cials about 17. Moslem prisoners jailed for bombings in Kuwait. The captors earlier had demanded the release of the prisoners in exchange for the Americans. iy i “The Kuwaiti government has been honorable, to the best of my knowl edge,” Waite said. “I don’t think it’s right for a government or individual to pressure them, and if my visit is interpreted that way, I will not talk to them.” Waite arrived -from Athens Greece, after being delayed for seve ral days by fighting in Beirut. Waite is expected to stay in the United States for few days before returning to Lebanon. I \ Waite will not meet with President Reagan, but will talk with adminis tration officials, said White House spokesman Larry Speakes. Waite has said he also would meet with rela tives of the hostages. The envoy has made two trips to Lebanon in an effort to free the Amer icans, four of whom wrote to the Rev. Robert Runcie, the archbishop of Canterbury, seeking h;~ intervention. Waite, a lay assistant to Runcie, has successfully negotiated the re lease of Britons held in Iran and Libya. He told reporters in Beirut last week that he .had met twice with the kidnappers. He did not identify them or say where trie meetings took place. Islamic Jihad, or Islamic Holy War, a group of Shiite fundamental ists apparently linked to Iran, has claimed it is holding the hostages. The hostages who signed the letter to Runcie were the Rev. Lawrence Jenco, 50, of Joliet, 111., a Roman Cathoic priest; Terry Anderson, 38, of Lorain, Ohio, chief Middle East cor respondent for The Associated Press; David Jacobsen, 54, of Huntington Beach, Calif., director of the Ameri can University Hospital; and Thomas Sutherland, 54, the Scottish-born dean of agriculture at the American Uni versity of Beirut. The Islamic Jihad has said it killed a fifth American, U.S. diplomat Wil liam Buckley, 57, of Medford, Mass. After controversy; school is dedicated to Anne Frank By SUSAN J. SMITH Associated Press Writer BERGEN, West Germany After reject ing a proposal to name a street after her, townspeople have agreed to name a school after Anne Frank, the German Jewish girl who died 40 years ago at the Bergen-Belsen Nazi concentration camp that was nearby. It is the first area memorial dedicated solely to the girl who was not quite 16 years old when she died in March, 1945. Her diary about 25 months of hiding with her family from the Nazi Gestapo in Amster dam, the Netherlands, before they were be trayed, made her famous worldwide after her death. The decision to name the school after her country the size of Tennessee, and Honduras is considered a key U.S. ally in Central America. Political observers expressed concern the out come could plunge the nation into a political crisis because of a last-minute decision on how the winner will be chosen. Under a new electoral law, the top vote-getter from the party that polls the most votes will be declared president and inaugurated Jan. 27 for a four-year term. That means one candidate could win while not getting a majority of the popular votes. The constitution calls for direct election of a president by a simple majority. Azcona Hoyo, a 58-year-old civil engineer, was running along with three other Liberal Party candidates and their combined total could be more than that of Callejas and two other National Party candidates. Two smaller and newer parties fielded one candidate each but were not considered likely to affect the outcome. It was widely expected that the National Party would protest if Callejas leads the field but is kept from the presidency by the new electoral law. Callejas, who studied at the University of Missis sippi, is a 42-year-old banker and businessman from a prominent family. The electoral reform law, essentially combining the primary and general elections into one round, had been forged earlier this year to end a constitu tional crisis. But it wasn’t until just before mid night Saturday that the National Elections Tribunal ruled the law would prevail. was reached after the proposal to name one of the town’s main streets for her aroused weeks of protests, especially among older residents. For years, Bergen townspeople had talked about a memorial to the girl who died along with 50,000 other people of overwork, disease and hunger in the camp. Inspired by President Reagan’s visit to the camp last May 6 and his reading of parts of the diary, the town’s Social Democrats pro posed that Belsen St. be renamed Anne Frank St. The street originally lead from Bergen to Belsen, which were two neighboring villages before the war. After the war, Belsen was incorporated into Bergen, and the town now has 12,000 residents. A group of 13 official observers from the United States praised the election as open and fair. But they said in a statement, “This delegation is concerned that the election eve clarification of election laws may complicate an otherwise very promising situation.” Suazo Cordova’s election in October 1981 ended 17 years of virtually uninterrupted military rule. The military remains the behind-the-scenes power in Honduras, the second-poorest country in the Americas after Haiti. The presidential campaign focused more on Suazo Cordova’s personality and leadership abili ty than on such issues as the country’s $2 billion foreign debt, 30 percent unemployment and short age of health care and schools. Nearly 2 million Hondurans were eligible to vote at 6,500 voting tables segregated by sex throughout the country. Also at stake were 138 seats in an expanded national assembly, 284 mayors and three vice presidents. Reagan administration officials were closely watching the outcome to see how well democracy is taking hold in Central America. The United States contributed $900,000 for the voting forms, ballot boxes and other electoral supplies. U.S. military and economic aid has increased significantly in Honduras since the leftist Sandi nistas came to power six years ago in neighboring Nicaragua. The aid totaled $214.7 million in 1985. U.S.-backed Nicaraguan rebels based in Hondu ras known as Contras are fighting the Sandinista government, adding to Honduran-Nica raguan tension. Opposition to the street naming was spear headed by Guenther Ernst, 52, the editor of the local newspaper, the Stadt-Anzeiger. He wrote in the paper that Bergen does not want a “daily demonstration” of its past through an Anne Frank St. He polled Bergen residents and reported a result of 545 to 29 against renaming the street. Ernst, who is also on the City Council and a conservative Christian Democrat, main tained that Bergen residents are tired of hearing about the concentration camp. “All the blame for all the SS crimes has been heaped on Bergen-Belsen,” he said in an interview. “Their (town residents’) annoyance at the street idea was understandable.” Ernst published letters from readers alleg- Jose Azcona, right, of the Liberal Party, hugs a supporter as early returns from Sunday’s national election indicate he will be the next president of Honduras. African government to rehire 1,800 Blacks fired for hospital strike By JAMES F. SMITH Associated Press Writer JOHANNESBURG, South Africa - The government said yesterday it would rehire abyut 1,800 Blacks who were fired for striking at a huge hospital in the black township of Soweto. The dispute had threatened to inspire sympathy walkouts else where. Police reported scattered incidents of rioting around the country but no new fatalities after one of the blood iest weeks in 15 months of rioting against apartheid. Official accounts listed at least 52 deaths last week. The decision to rehire the dismiss ed student nurses and auxiliary work ers came hours after a judge ruled that the initial mass firing at Barag wanath Hospital was illegal. Richard Goldstone, a provincial supreme court judge, ruled that cases must be reviewed separately. Baragwanath, in the sprawling black township of Soweto outside Johannesburg, has nearly 3,000 beds and a staff of almost 10,000. It was reported to be in chaos for much of the 10 days following the dismissals. Army reservists were called up to replace the 940 student nurses and more than 800 cooks, cleaners and other non-medical staff. Black unions had threatened to strike other hospitals if the workers were not reinstated. More than 800 workers were ar rested for demonstrating on the hos pital grounds during the strike. A fire U.S. for information leading to Abbas' punishment WASHINGTON, D.C. (AP) - The United States yesterday offered a reward of up to $250,000 for informa tion leading to the apprehension, prosecution and punishment of Mo hammed Abbas, a Palestine Liber ation Organization leader accused of masterminding the hijacking of the Achille Lauro cruise ship on Oct; 7. State Department Spokesman Charles E. Redman said reward mon ey could also be paid to those with information leading to the arrest and prosecution of others who took part in the hijacking but have not been ar rested. Abbas was in Italian custody brief ly after the hijacking, but authorities in Italy permitted him to leave the country even though the United States had sought his extradition. Several other Palestinians are wait ing trial in Italy on criminal charges stemming from the seizure of the boat. Italian prosecutors subsequently acknowledged that Abbas was in volved in the capture of the cruise ing that local houses had been plundered by survivors of the camp after it was liberated in April 1945. The vandalism “defied description,” said one letter signed by M. Staege, who opposed renaming Belsen St., because “thank you very much, we do not wish to be branded with the mark of Cain.” The Stadt-Anzeiger also published the com ments of a Bergen lawyer, Ernst von Briesen, saying that he had visited the camp in the 1940 s and found “the occupants made a very normal impression, neither tortured nor afraid.” A Social Democrat City Council member, Wilhelm Hohls, 65, takes a different view. “This quarrel has been shameful,” said Hohls, who proposed the street name change. The Daily Collegian Tuesday, Nov. 26, 1985—3 offers “I thought we should rename the street as a reminder. . . . People here need to he re minded so that it will not happen again.” Hohls contends that comments against the street name proposal demonstrate that many Bergen citizens have never come to terms with history. Hohls withdrew his proposal in July and put forward a Protestant minister’s suggestion that the local school for fifth and sixth grad ers be named after Anne Frank. The compromise was accepted by the City Council on Sept. 19 and approved by county authorities Nov. 7. The school, a two-story brick building which opened in 1981 and has never had a name, will be formally named the Anne Frank School in a ceremony early next year. set at a student nurse’s home in Soweto last Thursday night killed her mother and badly burned the student and three other people. The student nurse died the next day. Students are still pressing the de mands that led to the confrontation keeping dormitory gates open past 8 p.m., better food and an end to “vic timization” of leaders who speak out on the students’ behalf according to the report. At the small town of Leandra, about 50 miles east of Johannesburg, resi dents of a squatter' village won a reprieve from a government plan to relocate them and raze 115 shacks. Chief Commissioner J. van Jaars veld told a meeting of residents that the government had decided to let them stay. Four black squatters were killed a week ago during riots against the relocation plan. In Cape Town, the government dropped charges against the Rev. Allan Boesak, president of the World Alliance of Reformed Churches, and 18 other people accused of going to a funeral in a black township without permission. Boesak, who is of mixed race, still faces trial on four counts of subver sion. A standoff was reported in the black township of Randfontein, an hour’s drive west of Johannesburg, between residents and male migrant workers. Several people have been killed there in two weeks of clashes. reward ship in which the crew and passen gers were held hostage and one of the 14 Americans aboard, Leon Klinghof fer, was killed. Asked to comment on reports that Abbas has been seen in Baghdad, Iraq, Redman said the United States did not know his whereabouts. Last year, Congress appropriated $2 million to give rewards that might help bring terrorists to justice. The maximum amount that can be grant ed in connection with an individual case is $500,000. Redman said information received will be handled confidentially, and the identities of the informants will be protected. He said the announcement had been scheduled before this week end’s bloody hijacking and storming of an Egyptian airliner in Malta. Rddman said the actual amount of the payment would be based on the State Department’s evaluation of the usefulness of the information re ceived and any other relevant factors and thereforce could be less than the $250,000 limit set in the Abbas case. AP Laserphoto