4—The Daily Collegian Monday, April 14, 1986 state/nation/world Libya claims it moved foreigners to oil fields TRIPOLI, Libya Col. Moammar Khadafy's government claimed yes terday it had moved foreign workers, including U.S. citizens, to oil fields in the desert and army bases purported ly targeted for attack by American forces. But a Western diplomat told The Associated Press he had spoken to several representatives of his coun try in Libya, and "none of them reported any such incident." He spoke on condition he not be identified by name or country. Tripoli has remained quiet for days, and there were no signs yester day of any military preparations. The U.S. 6th Fleet was meanwhile poised in the Mediterranean off Li bya, awaiting President Reagan's decision on a possible strike in retal iation for Khadafy's reputed support of international terrorism. A statement released by a Libyan Information Department official, who refused to be identified, said, "Foreign workers have been forced to live in them (oil fields), taking into account that the majority are Ameri cans." Diplomats and business people esti mate 800 Americans still live in Li bya, including executives, oil field workers and about 100 American women married to Libyans. Reagan ordered all Americans out under risk of a 10-year prison sen tence and cut all U.S. economic ties with Libya after terrorists attacked Bush discusses retaliation WASHINGTON, D.C. (AP) Vice President George Bush said yester day that "Libyans have their finger prints all over state-sponsored terrorism," and the United States has a duty to punish those who threaten Americans overseas. • Deputy Secretary of State John C. Whitehead said U.S. officials had information implicating Libyan lead er Moammar Khadafy in the bomb ing of a West Berlin nightclub in which an American was killed and indicating that Khadafy was plotting more such attacks. President Reagan is weighing the use military force against Libya in retaliation for the attack, Whitehead said, but added, "the prospect of ThE PENN STATE LION AMbASSAdORS Look FOR ThE BRiNq IT TO the Rome and Vienna airports Dec. 27, killing 20 people, including five Americans. The United States blamed Palestin ian terrorist Abu Nidal of carrying out the attacks and accused Khadafy of harboring him. Other Westerners in Libya include Europeans. The British community, for example, is estimated at 5,000. Hundreds of foreign workers al ready live in the desert oil fields, often on rotating shifts lasting about one month. Oil is Libya's largest single source of income, although Western analysts say revenues plunged from $22 billion in 1984 to about $8 billion in 1985. The Western diplomat told the AP only five major docks are used to load oil on tankers, so there would be no need for U.S. warplanes to hit the widely scattered oil fields. The Libyan statement also said: "The military camps have been handed over to foreigners to repair them and to use them to live there. Foreign workers have been moved to army camps. "Libya has got information that America is going to attack several army camps and oil fields and petro chemical companies," the statement said. The statement said the moves to the oil fields and military bases took place Saturday, and the army has been moved to undisclosed locations. military action is something that only the president will decide on. He has not yet made that decision." Reagan last• week indicated his willingness to take military action if the perpetrators could be identified and an appropriate target located. Two U.S. aircraft carriers are awaiting orders off the coast of Sicily, Pentagon sources said. The Reagan administration was consulting with key members of Con gress and U.S. allies in Western Eu rope about the next step against Khadafy. Sen. Richard Lugar, R-Ind., said Saturday he was invited to the White House today to discuss possible ac tion against Libya. WELCOME COME ON IN! Old M .._A_N cßosswoßd plink iivTOMORROWfs COLIEVAN. TINE OpEN HOUSE FOR A ChANCE TO WIN dEIiCiOUS pßizEs! Winnie Mandela says apartheid will end with stones JOHANNESBURG, South Africa (AP) Black activist Winnie Mandela said yesterday that Blacks in South Africa will win their free dom this year with stones, matches and gasoline. In three separate, fiery speeches, Winnie Man dela said South Africa's Blacks were fighting a far more heavily armed white-led government, but that "the power is in our hands we have people's power." Blacks outnumber .Whites in South Africa 24 million to 5 million. Meanwhile, arsonists set fire to several huts yesterday in Mooiplaas, a black township near East London in eastern Cape Province, burning to death three black men, police said. The did not say what caused the clash and did not identify the victims. Police headquarters also said a patrol shot dead an 18-year-old black man during a stone throwing attack on police early yesterday in the black township of Katlehong, east of Johannes burg. you To TILE OLD MAIN OPEN HOUSE • SEE TIE IANd-qRANT fRESCOES • TOUR TILE AdMiNiSTRATiVE OffiCES • CliMb up TO ThE bEll TOWER • ENjOy FREE REfREShMENTS Apßii 15, 1986 . To 4 p.m. Winnie Mandela, antl•apartheld activist and hero of many black youths, is Johannesburg, yesterday. Mandela attended three political meetings in the mobbed as she attends a meeting in the black township of Kagiso, west of Johannesburg area yesterday. News reports said a fifth man, the black president of the United Democratic Front's branch in northern Transvaal Province, died in police custody in the Lebowa tribal homeland. Authorities did not confirm this. In the last 19 months, black activists have often attacked other Blacks seen as collaborators with the white government. On the other hand, vigi lantes who support the government have increas ingly attacked and killed anti-apartheid activists. Winnie Mandela, the wife of jailed black activ ist Nelson Mandela, spoke to crowds in Soweto, the black township southwest of Johannesburg where she lives, and in Kagiso and Munsieville, black areas about 20 miles west of Johannesburg. The speeches were Winnie Mandela's first since her lawyers said recent court rulings had effectively invalidated the banning order that had barred her from making political addresses. In remarks filmed by foreign television crews, Winnie Mandela said: "We have no guns we ATTENTION ALL STUDENTS Have Photograph Taken for New I.D. Cards If you plan to be enrolled as a student for the Fall Semester, 1986, you will have to have your photograph taken this semester according to the schedule listed below. Your new I.D. Card will be distributed to you when you return for classes in the fall during the week of August 25 - 29. If you will be living in a residence hall, your new I.D. Card will be given to you when y.ou receive your residence hall room key. If you will be living off campus, you may pick up your new I.D. Card in room 301 HUB anytime between 8:30 a.m. and 4:30 p.m. on Monday, August 25 through Friday, August 29, 1986. Your new I.D. Card will be required for the services of University dining halls, libraries and admission to athletic events. It will also be required for other University activities and services. The schedule is as follows: Photographs will be taken in the Waring Lounge anytime between 9 a.m and 4 p.m. according to the following schedule. ALPHABETICAL SEMESTER CLASSIFICATION BREAKDOWN BY FIRST AS OF SPRING SEMESTER 1986 LETTER OF LAST NAME DATE GRAD A-G Mon., Mar. 31 GRAD H-N Tues., Apr. 1 GRAD Wed., Apr. 2 (MAKE LIP PERIOD FOR ANY STUDENT) Wed., Apr. 2 (4p.m. - 9p.m.) 08.11 Thurs., Apr. 3 07 A-L Fri., Apr. 4 07 M-Z Mon., Apr. 7 • 06 A-G Tues., Apr. 8 (MAKE-UP PERIOD FOR ANY STUDENT) Tues., Apr. 8 (4p.m. - 9 p.m.) 06 H-N Wed., Apr. 9 06 O-Z Thurs., Apr. 10 05 A-L Fri., Apr. 11 05 M-Z Mon., Apr. 14 04 A-L Tues., Apr. 15 04 M-Z Wed., Apr. 16 (MAKE-UP PERIOD FOR ANY STUDENT) Wed., Apr. 16 (4p.m. - 9 p.m.) 03 A-Z Thurs., Apr. 17 02 A-L Fri., Apr. 18 02 M-Z Mon., Apr. 21 01 A-Z Tues., Apr. 22 PROV & NONDEGREE A-Z Wed., Apr. 23 • MAKE UP PERIODS FOR ALL STUDENTS Thurs., Fri., Apr. 24, 25 (9a.m. - 4 p.m.) " Example: A 6th semester student with the last name of Smith would have his or her photograph taken in Waring Lounge anytime between 9 a.m. and 4 p.m. on Thursday, April 10, 1986. NOTE: Any student unable to be photographed at their assigned time may come to any of the Make-up sessions (4.9 p.m. on 4/2, 4/8 and 4/16; and 9.4 on 4/24 and 4/25). Office of the University Registrar March 1986 have only stones, boxes of matches and petrol (gasoline)." The apparently were references to the stonings and firebomb attacks by black rioters against police during the anti-apartheid violence. She also referred in Kagiso to the "necklace" slayings in which activists have killed suspected black collaborators by putting tires around their necks, dousing the tires with gasoline and setting them alight. "With our necklaces, we shall liberate this country," Mandela said at Kagiso. Reporters present did not interpret the com ment as a call for Blacks to assassinate sus pected collaborators, but as a rallying call for Blacks to step up the campaign for equal rights. This year, "you'll get it all back," she said, "everything you lost since 1652'.' when Dutch settlers reached Cape Town and began their slow trek north, culminating in the creation of the Union of South Africa in 1910. Graves symbolizing the plight of South Africa were erected Thursday morning next to the shantytown to protest violence in South Africa. Attempts to dismantle the graveyard, built by the Committee for Justice in South Africa, were reported by police this weekend. Trouble at graveyard, police say Two attempts to dismantle the Drake was part of a group of The graveyard was built by the "graveyard" built on Henderson seven males but was the only one Black Student Coalition Against Mall by divestment supporters to cited for disorderly conduct, police Racism and the Committee for protest the University's invest- said. Justice in South Africa Thursday ments in South Africa were report- In a second incident the same morning to protest the violence in ed by University Police Services day, a police cadet apprehended a South Africa and the University's Saturday. male sometime Saturday evening investments in the riot-torn nation. In the first attack, John Douglas Drake, 220 N. Burrowes Rd., was cited at 4:45 p.m. Saturday by police for disorderly conduct. Drake, after shouting at the shan tytown protesters, allegedly picked up two crosses from the graveyard and smashed them together, breaking one, police said. Liberal arts valuable for careers in communication, speakers say By BRENDA FOSTER Collegian Staff Writer A liberal arts education can give students a definite advantage in the search for a career in communica tions, according to two University alumni and a University professor speaking as part of the 14th annual Liberal Arts Career Day. The discussion was one of eight sponsored by the Liberal Arts Alumni Association Thursday. Robert W. Steventon, a 1970 Univer sity graduate and vice president of Marketing General Inc., Alexandria, Va., assured students that a liberal arts education is what employers are looking for when they recruit. Stu dents with liberal arts backgrounds can look at a problem from all sides, Steventon said. Along with a broad liberal arts ... „. . , 4 7 .`c•••4 I ;agar - • •- •• ,: •t , :•.,.• •c „ •• 1'".7:, ''• '.• .* .. I. ' t ‘' %-- \ • ''' ''' ' .. -'''',.: ''. '''• '''' • ':...., ''' . , '' ,l .' - '---. 1 - ,,1, . 7 ti..... H , . i'.• '- I. •;• I I (... •,, , . .:----, ...., .„ .. ..._. ~,.. ' ...„.,,,..„.'‘; ~-... ' -.:.,-,:.: •- ~, . :. S 5... —•-• •,... \, • 1 „ ,„ ~, .. . , , .•. • . . • ...„ • • • . ...,..• ... 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Stewart education, Steventon stressed the need for students to gain some on-the job experience through an internship. "In order to start directly into your desired profession, it helps to have an internship on your repertoire," Ste venton said. Bernard Asbell, University asso ciate professor of English and former president of the American Society of Journalists and Writers, warned stu dents that money should not be con sidered a major factor if they desire careers in writing or editing. Asbell told students that the best approach to a writing career is to go to graduate school and become a professor of English. "That way," said Asbell,"you will be allowed to set aside time for your writing while earning a living be „ • • • / - 1 . • :::,7";,514 , . T 1 / 4 \ • I.lw 4 lt i- _~-, Collegian Riot cause professors are generally ex pected to do their work along with teaching." Jayne Miller, WBAL-TV news re porter in Baltimore, Md., and a 1976 University graduate, told students that a "desperate void" exists of good writers in the broadcasting industry. Miller also said that a good back ground in journalism education and experience is very important. She reminded students that the biggest television news concern today is the fear of libel. "Those with a good education in journalism are most likely to avoid libel charges," she said. "The secret to being successful in journalism," Miller added, "is to always make it look like you know what you're talking about." i. , .r. 7' •' E ....1 - • " • . I . 1..1 -I I. I I. I I I I•. 11 I I. I. .I I •I• I I. I I I -I I I -- I I I••I I. I I •I 237-7314 I 111 FREE 16 oz. Expires 4/16/86 I Open: 11 AM for Lunch I Pepsi®, Mountain Dew®, or Diet Pepsi® Till 2 AM at Night FRI.-SAT. Till 3 AM • Customer pays applicable sales tax i • not valid with any other coupon on same menu item 1111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111.11111111111111111111111•11111111111111111111111111111111M1111111111111•111111 , ;,, ~, Lm. , ..:_ T~ =MBE 11•11111•1 - 111'111111111 with the purchase of your favorite 14" or 18" Bubba's Sub RECYCLE The Daily Collegian Monday, April 14, 1986-5