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About Oregon daily emerald. (Eugene, Or.) 1920-2012 | View Entire Issue (Jan. 21, 1976)
Drugs 746-1611 Cameras 746-6511 TheYashka 35 ME. Everything a rangefinder camera ought to be at a budget price! —4 VASHICA suggested list—$9500 NOW Only $64 Vivitan 352 auto / thyristor ECTRONIC FLASH Hold on! The Vivitar 352 combines a thy ristor power saving system with handsome professional styling! ■ Automatic operation from 2 to 18 feet ■ Recycles as fast as Vi second ■ Up to 900 flashes per set of batteries ■ K II (ASA 25) guide num ber of 50 ■ Multiple f-stop settings for depth of field control ■ Sturdy camera mounting bracket 4777) t All Paterson ' Darkroom Products 25% OFF suggested list price offer good through Jan. 28 Vivitar Model 50 Electronic Flash small, lightweight for hot shoe cameras $9 97 • • • Burke & James Saturn “35” Heavy Duty Copy Stand Suggested list $7500 NOW $4477 Agfachrome 64 Color Slide Film with processing included 35 mm 20-exposure rolls s417 35 mm 36-exposure rolls s597 Nikkormat EL Choice of chrome or black body with 50mm f/2 lens Nikkormat EL the new “automatic” from Nikon. Durst F-30 Enlarger I with 50mm Schneider I Componar Lens v Suggested list $42777 Cibachrome Color Processing Drum Suggested list $1750 now $1477 Nikon Image Books Suggested list $2500 now $997 Join Moslem war effort PLO troops enter Lebanon BEIRUT (AP) — Leftist Moslem militiamen appar ently won control of large Christian areas of Lebanon Tuesday. A powerful Christian leader called for inter vention by the United States, the United Nations or Western Europe. U.S., Lebanese, Syrian and Israeli government and military sources denied reports of massive Syrian armed intervention in the war but indicated that an estimated 1,500 troops of the Palestine Lib eration Army had crossed into Lebanon from Syria to fight on the Moslem side. U.S. Secretary of State Henry Kissinger warned against outside intervention, and Arab League Secretary-General Mahmoud Riad called for an im mediate Arab summit to settle the war. State-run Lebanese television announced that Syrian Foreign Minister Abdul Halim Khaddam and the Syrian army and air force chiefs were due in Beirut today to try to work out a settlement. A police spokesman said communications were lost with much of the country, but that Moslem forces appeared to have added most of northern and east ern Lebanon to the southern area they already con trolled. “The last messages received reported scores of tiny Christian villages besieged by Moslem tribal war riors in the north and east," he said. "Hundreds of Christian families there have already fled to neigh boring Syria." Right-wing Christian forces held onto an area along the coast and mountains between Beirut and Tripoli and part of the capital itself. They were clean ing out Moslem pockets, including the last Palesti nian holdout in the corpse-strewn Karantina slum of Beirut. Police said more than 200 people were killed, most of them combatants, in the previous 24 hours. That raises the death toll since Jan. 1 to more than 2,050, in addition to the estimated 8,000 killed last year. Interior Minister Camille Chamoun, 76-year-old leader of one of the private Christian groups fighting Moslems and Palestinians, called for the foreign in tervention after he was evacuated by helicopter from his besieged seaside mansion south of Beirut. Chamoun, who as president in 1958 called in U.S. Marines to end another civil war situation, charged Monday night that up to 15,000 Syrian army troops had crossed into Lebanon. The Syrian government and Palestine guerrilla leaders denied it, and U.S. State Department and Israeli military officials dis counted Chamoun’s charge. Palestinian and Lebanese military sources said Syrian-trained units of the Palestine Liberation Army — the official military wing of Yasir Arafat's Palestine Liberation Organization — had moved into Lebanon. Intelligence sources here estimated their number at 1,500, and U S. and Israeli officials agreed with it. Israeli military sources said the Palestinian army could tip the balance to the Moslems in the battle for Beirut. Palestinian sources said that Israel was massing troops along Lebanon's southern border, but Lebanese authorities denied it. Israeli Defense Minister Shimon Peres toured the border and said the presence of large numbers of Palestinian guerril las in the neighboring country had direct implica tions on Israel's security." Israel has previously indicated it will intervene in Lebanon if Syria does so, but has not said whether it considers Syrian-trained Palestinian army to consti tute Syrian intervention. Kissinger issued his warning against outside in volvement in “the tragedy now befalling Lebanon during a stopover in Copenhagen on his way to Mos cow. He said the war "has the potential for drawing in outside powers” and warned against "any unilateral action that could lead to an expansion of hostilities. In Washington, White House Press Secretary Ron Nessen said the State Department had sent warn ings through diplomatic channels for all outside par ties not to interfere in Lebanon. Chamoun, whose home is in an enclave of four Christian villages under attack by Moslems and Palestinians for several days, issued his plea for intervention after talking with Pres. Suleiman Fran jieh and top military commanders. The president, a Chnstian, was left without a government when Pre mier Rashid Karami, a Moslem, resigned Sunday. Kamal Junblatt, a Moslem leader, traveled to Syna for talks with Pres. Hafez Assad. Sources said his tnp and Franjieh s meeting were related to Assad s ef forts to arrange another cease-fire "The situation is developing rapidly, Chamoun told newsmen. "This requires an immediate inter nationalization of the cnsis and an immediate inter national intervention or we will end in catastrophe. Arab League Secretary-General Riad asked Arab governments to respond within 72 hours to his call from Cairo for a summit, which he proposed should take place before the end of the month. "Lebanon s problems should be solved by the Arabs themselves," Riad said, not the United Na tions or any other European state Weaver halts BPA suit A suit by Congressman Jim Weaver, D-Eugene, designed to stop the Bonneville Power Author ity (BPA) from signing long-term contracts with industrial custom ers, was dropped Monday. 'What we set out to accomplish, has been accomplished/' says Weaver. “There is no reason to continue with the suit. Weaver said earlier he filed the suit to prevent the BPA from ex tending industrial power supply contracts from current expiration dates in the mid-1980s to 1994 Many of those extended contracts would have gone to aluminum re duction plants. “Cheap BPA hydro-power was intended to be used first by domestic and rural consumers, second by labor-intensive indus tries, and finally by the energy in tensive industries. Weaver has spoken in favor of the "lifeline" concept of utility rates In his plan, users would get a reduced rate on utilities up to a certain level of use deemed minimum for a comfortable life. There would be a higher rate for higher use. I o Golben ^Temple ^ NATURAL FOODS 1211 ALDER HONEY ICE CREAM CONES! (NO PURCHASE NECESSARY) THURSDAY & FRIDAY j-.**-** DISCOUNTS ON OTHER ITEMS IN THE STORE. 9:30-5:30 Iff//£/£/&Y///f9ft//i'/' 7