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About Oregon daily emerald. (Eugene, Or.) 1920-2012 | View Entire Issue (May 1, 1978)
Rhodesians ask for ‘critics’ reinstatement SALISBURY, Rhodesia (AP) — A powerful faction in Rhodesia's biracial administration Sunday demanded the reinstatement of black cabinet minister Byron Hove, but wavered on whether to quit the interim government in a dispute over his firing. “The party is reviewing the whole question of its continued participation in the transitional government,” the United African National Council said in a state ment. The statement came after a four-hour meeting between party leaders and their head — Bishop Abel Muzorewa, an influential moderate and one of three blacks on Rhodesia’s ruling executive council. Hove, dismissed as co-minister of justice Friday for criticizing the racial makeup of Rhodesia’s police and judiciary, told reporters in London that the two-month-old government would be in danger without Muzorewa. He is thought to have the widest support of any council member among Rho desia’s blacks. Afganistan names leftist leader NEW DELHI, India (AP) Afganistan's new military gov ernment gave the first hint of its political leaning Sunday by an nouncing the selection of Nur Mohammed Taraki, a reported left ist, as prime minister in the wake of last week’s bloody coup. New reports said at least 500 persons were killed in the upris ing. Kabul Radio in the Afgan capital announced Taraki’s appointment in a broadcast monitored here and in London. In another broadcast monitored in Islamabad, Pakistan, the radio said the Soviet Union on Sunday became the first nation to recognize the new government. In Moscow, the Soviet govern ment gave no immediate confir mation of that report. Kabul Radio called Taraki a “nationalist and revolutionary personality” but gave no party affiliation. The British Broadcasting Corp. in London identified Taraki as the leader of the People’s Faction Party, a purported pro Communist group that operated underground under the previous Afgan government. He reportedly was one of several persons ar rested in left-wing demonstrations that preceded the coup, which began Thursday. Nixon felt doomed when tapes revealed NEW YORK (AP) — It comes as no surprise, but Richard Nixon thinks his presidency was doomed from the day the public learned his tape recorders eaves dropped on every conversation in his office. (-World at a glance From Associated Press report* IMF wants slower U.S. growth MEXICO CITY — Finance ministers at International Mone tary Fund (IMF) meetings here agreed Sunday that world economic growth should include a faster growth rate for Japan and West Germany and a slightly slower one for the United States. He told a news conference at the close of the meetings that unemployment and possible new trade barriers could mean new worldwide recession. There was general agreement at the meeting that the economic growth of the United States last year was adequate while that of Japan and West Germany was too slow. This contributed to the large trade deficit in the United States and surpluses in Japan and West Germany. Collapsed scaffold examined PARKERBURG, W.Va. — Several factors may have contri buted to the scaffold collapse that sent 51 men to their deaths at a power plant cooling tower last week, the leader of a team of federal investigators said Sunday. David Rhone, regional director of the federal Occupational Safety and Health Administration, said his team of six inves tigators is examining the quality of the concrete, the mechanism used to hoist concrete to the top of the tower, the design of the tower and the method by which the scaffolding was moved up after each day's work. ‘Moro letters’ surface ROME — A flurry of new letters attributed Sunday to former Premier Aldo Moro pressed for acceptance of his kidnappers’ demand that the government free 13 jailed terrorists in exchange for his liberty. The Italian government and ruling Christian Democratic Party have steadfastly refused that ultimatum from the Red Brigades ultra-leftist guerrillas who seized Moro, the 61-year-old party president, on March 16. “I now believe,” he writes, "that from the time of the disclosure of the existence of the tapes and my decision not to destroy them, my presidency had little chance of surviving to the end of its term.” The quotation, from Nixon's forthcoming memoirs, was in the Washington Star Sunday. The Star is one of the newspapers buy ing a seven-part series of excerpts being syndicated by a subsidiary of the New York Times. The book, “RN: The Memoirs of Richard Nixon” will list at $19.95 when it goes on sale in May and special autographed editions are being offered at $50 and $250. Once the existence of the tapes became public knowledge, Nixon fought desperately to keep their contents secret — a battle he fi nally lost in the Supreme Court. The rebels, who referred to themselves Sunday as the Demo cratic Republic Revolutionary Council, killed President Mohammed Daoud, 69, and his brother-adviser Naeem, 68, Fri day after the brothers were said to have resisted “madly.” WOMEN/SPEAK A Brown Bag Lunch Series May 2 - Women in the Religious Professions May 9 - Volunteerism: Responsibility or Ripoff? May 16 - Gay Rights and Referendum 51 May 23 - Secretaries are People Too May 30 - Report on the Oregon 3rd World Women’s Conference Tuesday Noons EMU Sponsored by the UO YWCA J ELECT JEFF WARREN for ASUO PRES* and an ASUO= That Works for Academic Quality 1. Replace “publish or perish” with “teach or terminate.” 2. Disclose faculty course evaluations. That Has a Strong Lobbying Effort for: 1. Lower tuition. 2. Lower out-of-state tuition. 3. Increased Financial Aid. This ad paid for by a lot of people who want to see Jeff Warren elected ASUO President ^ - Record dope haul snatched WASHINGTON (AP) — The head of the Drug Enforcement Administration says the seizure of 574 tons of marijuana in Columbia represents the largest drug raid in history. Birkenstock. Atrium (2nd floor) Mon-Sat 11-6 Repairs & Resolins 687-0065 WEEKLY SPECIAL prices good through May 6. Record Sale Classical Jazz Folk Easy Listening Rock and more. All sale priced from $2.49 On the Main Floor. Page 5