the • da i ..S. bombs By MICHAEL PUTZEL Tripoli time, 7 p.m. EST, and were over AP White House Correspondent within minutes. Correspondents in Tripoli were reporting sporadic explosions and gun- WASHINGTON, D.C. - U.S. warplanes fire more than three hours later - well after attacked "the headquarters and terrorist Weinberger said U.S. planes had returned to facilities" of Libya's Moammar Khadafy, base. President Reagan said last night. Initial Weinberger said the Air Force bombers reports were that the middle-of-the-night air were dispatched from three U.S. bases in strike succeeded, he said, adding: "If nec- England with the permission of the British essary, we will do it again." government. However, they were forced to Defense Secretary Caspar Weinberger said fly an extra 2,800 miles round-trip because an Air Force F-111 was unaccounted for, but France had refused permission for the bomb he did not know if it had been downed. Libyan ers to fly over its territory en route to the radio said three U.S. planes had been hit and Mediterranean, he said. the crew of one jet had been killed, after they Pentagon sources said military officials were downed, "by Libyan citizens." - had decided several days ago that any mili- Reagan, in a nationally broadcast address tary; strike would be conducted at night, to explain the military strike, said the United because intelligence information indicates States had direct, precise and irrefutable Libyan pilots have little training in night evidence that Khadafy had ordered recent flights. The U.S. planes have sophisticated anti-American attacks, including the bomb- avionics and navigation gear for operation at ing of a discotheque frequented by service- night and in bad weather. men in West Berlin. Knowledgeable officials said Khadafy's "When our citizens are abused or attacked headquarters was one target of the raid, anywhere in the world, we will respond in self although it was not on the Pentagon's official defense," Reagan said. In an unmistakeable list of targets. Reagan himself described the warning to Khadafy, he said: "We have done attacks as "concentrated and carefully tar what we had to do. If necessary, we will do it geted to minimize casualties among Libyan again." people, with whom we have no quarrel." At the Capitol in Washington, security was A broadcast by Libya radio, monitored by tightened just minutes after the air strikes the British Broadcasting Corp., said ". . .the had ended. savage American invaders carried out a Reagan's spokesman, Larry Speakes, said treacherous and barbaric air strike .. . the purpose of the raids was to "pre-empt and against the residence of the brother leader of discourage" Libyan terrorism, and he said the revolution (Khadafy). A number of mem the United States had evidence that Khadafy hers of the family of the brother leader were had ordered more anti-American incidents. injured as a result of this raid." He said the raids began at 2 a.m. today, Khadafy survived the attack, a Libyan Filk ITALY 1 .... - -_ - _-a.-- .. the 111111110 ,--in L Corn. ----------='_. . ------ liii - Irs- _-.-=-. - Win ik . min= briefint . a.m..... GREECE ral dun . • SICILY - 11 • Em s 'N,... TURKEY grounds i .7 - 1-_------__ auto and t. 1111111•1111 K ........mismi„. - amila NMI& hance prole. _________ . ______ ' '' MINIIIIII., luMMIIIIICIIMMIL -=-:-.- . 4 11 . `" - - - - TUNISIA _ _ , py , • MALTA_ — MEDITERRANEAN. SEAL---- 'llllu air o :T. _ LINE OF DEATH____---* LEBANON " ripoli' ......------ u's 0 7 im - - Tobruk .._,,, glißee‘inghazilli By The Associated Press Cis Guff of Sidra LIBYAO Sidi Bilal 10 Al Azziziyah Bks. In 0 Tripoli Military Airport Libyan military bases 0 Al Jumahiriya Bks. ~.....A.L. U.S aircraft carriers America 0 Benina Airbase and Coral Sea - *•-............. 5...... \ ~$ ..„ ' , ' - • . Collegian Photo I Dan Oleekl 'All that I say is true' Marc Berkowitz, a survivor of the Auschwitz death camp, tells an audience in Schwab Auditorium last night about his experiences at the hands of the Nazi war criminal Dr. Josef Mengele, ending his speech with a plea for a better world. Please see story, Page 16. fyi weather • Today all fourth semester students with last names from Ato L should This afternoon, cloudy with have their pictures taken in Waring Lounge for new identification cards. showers and periods of rain. • Because of a forecast of rain, University workers will not begin High 47. Tonight, continued scheduled spraying of campus elms today. Motorists should watch for showers. Low 38. Tomorrow, signs announcing spraying later this week. unseasonably cold with rain and there is the possibility of snow • Curtin Road at Borland Laboratory will return to one-lane traffic this late in the day. High only reach morning until crews finish backfilling work. ing 42 Heidi Sonen U.S. bombs Libya; 1 plane feared lost olle • ian official said, but government sources said two of his sons were injured. Libyan radio reported foreigners were also injured in the U.S. raid, which it said struck a military airport in Tripoli and the sprawling barracks complex where Khadafy has his home and headquarters. Three hours later, new explosions and gunfire rocked the city. It may have involved street fighting, but this could not be confirmed. Weinberger said the attacks were mounted against five targets near Tripoli and Bengha zi using 18 F-111 bombers from U.S. bases in England and 15 A-6 and A-7 attack jets off Navy carriers America and Coral Sea. Speakes, the deputy White House press secretary, described the targets as Libya's "terrorist infrastructure the command and control systems, intelligence, commu nications, logistics and training facilities." Secretary of State George Shultz, appear ing with Weinberger in the White House briefing room just after Reagan's Oval Office statement, said the Soviet Union was told of the operation as it was taking place and was assured it was "in no way directed at the Soviet Union." Asked what would happen if Libya was to retaliate for the air strikes, Shultz said, "What is clear tonight is that the United States will take military action under certain circumstances." "He counted on America to be passive," Reagan • said of Khadafy. "He counted wrong." Several dozen anti-nuclear war activists and foes of Reagan's Central American poli cies turned out last night to chant slogans outside the White House decrying the U.S. attack on Libya. "We do not want to see Rambo in Tripoli!," the group shouted in unison in Lafayette Park in a demonstration hastily arranged by the Committee for a SANE Nuclear Policy. Within five minutes after Speakes finished briefing reporters at the White House, seve ral dump trucks were brought onto the grounds of the U.S. Capitol, blocking all the auto and truck entrances in a move to en hance protection against any terrorist attack. Raid . wins The U.S. raid on Libya won broad congres sional support last night, although some legislators raised questions about whether they should have received more notice of the bombings. Others said the failure of European allies to join in economic sanctions against Libya left the president no choice. In other reaction, a Soviet commentator today called the U.S. attack on Libya a "new bloody crime" aimed at intimidating the North African country. Canadian_Prime Minister Brian Mulroney also reactej to the raid, saying last night that his government was notified of U.S. inten tions concerning Libya. But there was little Simone de Beauvoir dies PARIS (AP) Simone de Beau voir, a leading light of French litera ture, a torchbearer of the world feminist movement with her book "The Second Sex" and lifelong com panion of the late Jean-Paul Sartre, died Monday. She was 78 years old. Miss de Beauvoir, who had grown increasingly reclusive in her final years, died in Cochin Hospital in southern Paris almost six years to the day after Sartre's death on April 15, 1980. Hospital officials, citing instruc tions from the family, refused to specify the cause of death. But a source close to Miss de Beauvoir, speaking on condition of anonymity, said she died of pulmonary edema. Simone de Beauvoir The source, speaking on condition of anonymity, said Miss de Beauvoir underwent an appendectomy prior to her death. Premier Jacques Chirac said her death "underlines the end of an era." President Reagan speaks from the Oval Office last night after his television address to the nation about the United States attack on Libya. support at home official response from other foreign govern ments to the American bombing raid on Libyan targets. In Paris, the French Foreign Ministry reported that its embassy in the Libyan capital was hit by the bombing raid but no one apparently was injured. Senate Majority Leader Bob Dole, R-Kan., said: "I just believe that the president did what the American people would have wanted him to do a proportionate response to an act of terrorism where there's no doubt about Libya's fingerprints being all over" the bombing of a West German nightclub in which an American soldier died, said Sen. Edward Kennedy,' D-Mass., said, "I think all Americans would stand with the commander in chief at this moment." PSU prof remembers late author's influence By CELESTE McCAULEY Collegian Staff Writer Calling Simone de Beauvoir her "intellectual mother," a University associate professor in French and contemporary literature said she felt a sense of loss when she heard that the 78-year-old French author and feminist died yesterday. "I think she was a very, very hu mane person. I cried when I heard the news," said Christine Makward. A 45-year-old native of the French Riviera, Makward said de Beauvoir was an ideal in her life while the professor was an undergraduate and graduate studying at the Sorbonne in the mid-60s and early 70s and still is today. "De Beauvoir has been an ideal in my life which is still very valid. She was a really important influence in my life and my thinking and all of my generations (during the 605)," she said. "I lived with her thought, her work and her example of the way she carried her relationship with (French philosopher Jean-Paul) Sartre based on total openness and respecting the other's freedom no matter what the pain was," Makward said. De Beauvoir's most famous work, The Second Sex, was published in 1949 and although she wasn't active in the feminist movement then, the book's themes became vital tools of femi nists in the '6os and early '7os. AP Laseiphoto Makward said she had a brief ex change with de Beauvoir in 1981. The professor had requested the rights to the English translation of the play "The Useless Mouths" so she could Tuesday, April 15, 1986 Vol. 86, No. 188 16 pages University Park, Pa. 16802 Published by students of The Pennsylvania State University ©l9BB Collegian Inc. Meanwhile, Senate Democratic Leader Robert C. Byrd of West Virginia expressed concern about what happens next. "This may blind his (Khadafy's) people to the economic problems that persist there and they might rally around Khadafy," Byrd said. "Are we going to do this again, and again and again?" In Moscow, the commentary of Soviet polit ical news analyst Vladimir Goncharov in the official news agency, Tass, and said the United States "has started speaking in its true tongue the tongue of bombs, flames and death." Goncharov said, "American imperialism has perpetrated a new bloody crime" and then referred to U.S. actions in Vietnam, Nicaragua and Grenada. include it in her anthology of contem porary drama by French women. "I was touched she replied in long hand herself because she was ex tremely busy with nursing Sartre and answering students' inquiries for in formation for their dissertations. I was amazed she was writing personal notes." De Beauvoir was both the friend and lover of Jean-Paul Sartre, a renowned philosopher of existentia lism, Makward said. "That makes relationships very different and very authentic. They were close friends and lovers throughout their lives. In a sense it was the best marriage you've ever seen." Makward recalled the time she got into trouble with her parents when she was 18 and was reading the works of Sartre and de Beauvoir in her last year of high school. Her father confiscated "The Wall," a collection of Sartre's short stories. "We read (works of Sartre and de Beauvoir) and we got into trouble reading them in my household. The names were just bad names for Cith olics. They were not respected and they were considered immoral. "She (de Beauvoir) dropped out at 14 (from the Catholic religion) and it took me until I was 19 years old to drop out. "At one point I tried to integrate the two but there was no way I could reconcile personal freedom and re spect and the tenants of the Catholic church," she said. "You find your values within your self and not outside, which is why it is an impossible marriage within the 'two." AP Laserphoto Paris