Thursday, July 12, 1984/The Battalion/Page 3 Gunmen blow up Libyan Embassy in Lebanon v? United Press International ^BEIRUT, Lebanon — A gang of' gunmen stormed the Libyan Em bassy Wednesday, forced the guards outside and blew up the building in the third attack against Libyan inter ests in west Beirut in two weeks, jjtt’olice said no one was hurt in the remote-control bombing, which came two days after Libyan diplo mats fled the Lebanese capital under the threat of being kidnapped by a radical Shiite Moslem group. BfThe damage was so extensive that the building is no longer us able," a police report said. Bn the Christian east Beirut sub urb of Baabda, the Lebanese Cab inet approved a plan calling for some 300 hostages held by Christian and Moslem militiamen to be re leased “as soon as possible,” radio re ports said. The Cabinet, acting after angry protests over an estimated 4,000 ab ductions in nine years of civil war, also discussed implementing the death penalty for convicted kidnap pers and offering financial compen sation to the families of murdered kidnap victims. No decisions were announced. A Shiite faction called the “Sadr Brigades” took responsibility for the blast at the Libyan Embassy. The same group said it kidnapped Li The blast blew out all the windows of the five-story embassy and gutted the interior, leaving only the shell of the building still standing. bya’s senior diplomat in Beirut Mon day and another Libyan envoy in the city June 23. Both reportedly have been released. The Sadr Brigades have sworn to avenge the loss of Mousa Sadr, a Shiite imam, or religious leader, who vanished during a visit to Libya in 1978. Libyan leader Moammar Kha- dafy has denied any knowledge of Sadr’s presumed death. The group claimed in a telephone call to a foreign news agency that it bombed the seaside Libyan People’s Bureau, Libya’s diplomatic mission in Moslem west Beirut, to protest a planned visit to Beirut by Libyan Foreign Minister Abdel Salam Tu- reiki. Tureiki, in Damascus at the time of the explosion, reportedly called off his visit and remained in the Syr ian capital. Police said 10 gunmen overpow ered several policemen and barged into the embassy about 4 a.m. They forced three guards to leave and held them about 500 yards away while an accomplice planted a 55- pound bomb inside and set it off by remote control. The blast blew out all the windows of the five-story embassy and gutted the interior, leaving only the shell of the building still standing. Lebanon broke off diplomatic re lations with Libya earlier this year, but Prime Minister Rashid Karami restored ties with Khadafy’s govern ment soon after forming his “na tional unity” Cabinet on April 30. The Cabinet, which includes the leaders of Lebanon’s Moslem and Christian militias, appointed an ex ecutive-level panel to deal with the kidnapping issue that has under mined a Syrian-mediated security plan under which some measure of order has been restored in Beirut. Most of the 4,000 missing people are thought to be dead; Red Cross officials have said the rival militias are holding only about 300 hostages. who ncrease es that a lengew to becoi your 5b is in An rated evi 'or busitM (he direct! Group ie Energy tips offered By SUZANNA YBARRA Reporter Picture this: someone drenched with sweat fanning himself with a notebook-paper fan and smiling at a $25 electric bill. Or picture this: someone sell ing textbooks in the middle of the semester because it’s the only way to pay the electric bill. There is a happy medium: en ergy conservation. Conserving energy doesn’t mean doing without life’s little pleasures, particuarly the electric ones. It just means being careful those comforts don’t cost an arm or a leg, or textbooks. Sometimes it takes spending money to save money. Connie Custavus, bookkeeptn- at Univer sity bookstore, and her husband |joe are remodeling their home in Bryan to save energy. “We’vejust put new windows in because the one’s before leaked really badly Mrs. Gustavus said. ’We’re lowering our ceilings and adding more insulation, we’ve got ten-foot high ceilings." Mrs. Gustavus and her hus band have a new water bed also that helps keep them cool at night in the summer and warm during the winter. Bob Gingerich, owner of Wa- terbed Gallery, said waterbeds can help save on utility bills. “If you play it right,” Gingerich said, “you could turn the air con ditioner up in the summer and the heater down in the winter." Gingerich said the water in a waterbed is about 70 degrees dur ing the summer. “Lower the water bed (heater) about four degrees in the sum mer,” he said, “and you’ll find you’ll turn your air conditioner up.” A waterbed can help just as much in the winter because a wa terbed holds heat well and the comfortors act as insulators, Gin gerich said. Knowing how much electricity an appliance uses and how much it costs to use it can be helpful in saving energy. For example: a window air conditioner uses 750 to 1500 watts per hour while a fan uses 100 watts. The cost of operating an appli ance each month can lie figured by multiplying the wattage of the appliance by the hours it is used for a month. Multiply that answer by the rate (cents per killowatt hour). Using the formula above, an air conditioner used eight hours a day for 30 days each month would cost about $51 for a year. In contrast, a fan used the same amount of time would cost about $34 for a year. If there is a cool breeze outside, open a window; it’s the cheapest way to cool down. The same breeze that’s cooling the inside of the house could be drying blue jeans just as cheap. A clothes dryer using an average 5,000 watts an hour costs about $7 a month if used eight times. ace on to fluenceca! ioration o] the recort tentasfto in Ameit and AutP ;ball lean in. Yetnft ccom re singinf led a •ising brtune5 :: e past ft* the ranto Amtrak train, truck collide; two killed United Press International MCBEE, S.C. — Amtrak’s north bound Silver Star slammed into a tanker truck full of diesel fuel Wednesday, killing two men and slowly dragging passenger cars la den with 309 people through a rag ing inferno visible seven miles away. Flames cracked windows and poured smoke and searing heal into the cars, but only four passengers were treated for minor bruises. “Everybody was screaming, but no one really ran — there was nowhere to go,” said Mary Anne Herbeck, 18, of Hackensack, N.J. “We thought we were all going to die.” The 14-car train bound from Florida to New York struck the tanker truck at 7:30 a.m., slicing the cab from the tanker and hurling its driver 75 feet away in Amtrak’s sec ond serious accident in five days. The tanker exploded into tow ering flames and the train, its engi neer dead and its fireman injured, ground slowly through the inferno. dragging the truck’s cab with it. Highway Patrolman J.A. Morris said the Silver Star’s “deadman’s brake,” thrown shortly before im pact, finally brought the train to a halt about 80 yards clear of the fire. “It was fortunate it didn’t stop in the fire,” Morris said. He said brush around the intersection obscured vi sion and the truck driver “probably had to go out on the track a little to see what was coming.” The passengers, some of them sickened by fear, heat and smoke, piled out of the fire-blackened silver cars when the train finally halted. Some said it took at least 15 minutes to clear the fire. Saturday, Amtrak’s northbound Montrealer derailed in Vermont, killing five sleeping passengers and injuring 148 others. In March, the Silver Star derailed on its south bound run near Kittrell, N.C., injur ing 50 of its 249 passengers and crewmen. OPEC ministers to allow Nigeria to produce more oil United Press International VIENNA — OPEC oil ministers Wednesday agreed to let Nigeria produce more crude but held the line on the cartel’s $29-a-barrel base oil price and its 17.5 million barrel-a- day production ceiling. OPEC President Kamel Hassan Maghur said the group’s semi-an nual suntmit had been marked by a RICHARDSON (continued from page 1) dean and vice chancellor for engi neering. In addition to paying Richardson $1 10,000 a year, Texas A&M agreed to hire his wife, Barbara, a epide miologist, as a lecturer in the univer sity’s Veterinary Public Health De partment. Richardson began his professional career in 1953 at the MIT Dynamic Analysis and Control Laboratory. “pragmatic... very friendly and se rious atmosphere.” But insiders said the Organization of Petroleum Exporting Countries appeared to have papered over ma jor differences at the tense confer ence that often erupted into heated debate among its 13 members. Sources said OPEC is deeply di vided over measures to prevent a new round of price cuts in face of the global oil surplus. “We are the healthiest group in the world,” Maghur told reporters at a news conference at the heavily guarded hotel where the ministers had met behind closed doors. An OPEC communique said the group “reiterated its strict adher ence” to the unprecedented March 1983 agreement that reduced the cartel’s base oil price for the first time by $4 to $29 a barrel and re stricted its production to 17.5 mil lion barrels a day. The ministers said Nigeria will be allowed to raise its production to 1.4 million barrels a day in August and to 1.45 million barrels in September. While working toward master’s (1955) and doctoral (1958) degrees in mechanical engineering, he con ducted research on stability and con trol of a variety of electrohydraulic, fluid and mechanical ystems. Follow ing service in the U.S. Army Ord nance Corps designing nuclear blast instrumentation, he returned to MIT and rose through the academic ranks to professor of mechanical en gineering. He has taught design, fluid power control, dynamics and control, trans portation technology and other sub jects and led research in control components, fluidics and high-per formance vehicle-suspension sys tems. Richardson served as first chief scientist of the U.S. Department of Transportation from 1970-72 where he developed new programs on uni versity and basic transportation re search, prevention of aircraft hijack ing, high-speed inteltcity and automated urban transit. After re turning of MIT he was appointed head bf mechanical engineering in 1973. Richardson is co-author of the landmark text “Introduction to Sys tem Dynamics” as well as numerous technical articles. He received the American Society of Mechanical En gineers/Pi Tau Sigma gold medal in 1963 and the Secretary of Transpor tation’s Medal in 1972. SAJUMSLE ; person d resw r ' [ouse ses in ^ skeptic of tiJf; ist severe ors. things' 1 ; itials w ce is ;sive stm 1 ' re re^ ily^ /ill be presr polity large catus f 8 thou' # is secon' aarty cat ertf.P 1 ?! . it is at i voters vays ^ jragn^ ies to ope for' : be ^ It’s easy to lose your way when hunting for a new apartment. Now, Treehouse Village is helping to make your choice a little clearer by offering you new efficiencies and one- and two-bedroom furnished and unfurnished apartments with a wild assortment of features. Just a few blocks from campus along the regularly- scheduled shuttle bus route, Treehouse Village features the popular two-bedroom roommate floor plan - perfect for students. Fireplaces are available, too! So come in from the jungle and settle into a comfortable new apartment at Treehouse Village. TREEHOUSE VILLAGE- APARTMENTS LEASE NOW FOR FALL 1984. Treehouse Village Apartments. From $305. For information, visit the Treehouse Village Apartments Leasing Office at 800 Marion Pugh Blvd. at Luther Street 409/764-8892 Professionally managed by Callaway Properties.