Oregon daily emerald. (Eugene, Or.) 1920-2012, October 22, 1981, Page 5, Image 5

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    inter/national news
From Associated Prssi raporta
Reagan arrives
at 22-nation summit
CANCUN, Mexico
Pres Reagan arrived in Mex
ico on Wednesday for the first
summit of 22 rich and poor
nations, saying the road to pros
perity for the hungry and im
poverished nations of the Third
World is lighted by private en
terprise, not major foreign aid
As he stepped from Air Force
One, Reagan was embraced by
Mexican Pres Jose Lopez
Portillo and accepted a 21-gun
salute before he and his host
went into a private meeting at
the airport
The formal sessions begin
Thursday
As he left the White House
Wednesday morning, Reagan
said he may have been too
harsh last week when he said he
would be entering a "hostile
atmosphere" at Cancun
We go to Cancun with no
illusions," Reagan said in a brief
departure statement "The
problems of hunger and poverty
are severe and deeply rooted
They cannot be solved
overnight Nor can massive
transfers of wealth somehow
miraculously produce new well
being
"Our message in Cancun will
be clear The road to prosperity
and human fulfillment is lighted
by economic freedom and in
dividual incentive."
He promised continued U S
support to help “tree people
build free markets" in the Third
World
Delegate knocks
U.S. grain sales
WASHINGTON
Pres Reagan's decision to
step up grain sales to the Soviet
Union undercuts U S efforts to
gain concessions on human
rights and military cooperation
in Europe, the chief U S
delegate to the Helsinki review
conference said today
‘ The Soviet Union, in my
opinion, is a social and econ
omic failure, only a military
success,” Ambassador Max
Kampelman told reporters "I
am very reluctant for the ad
ministration to take steps
strengthening an area where
they are weak ”
Representatives of 33 Eu
ropean nations, the United
States and Canada are review
ing compliance with the 1975
agreement they signed in Hel
sinki to lessen East-West ten
sions and further human rights
After 14 months of rancorous
debate, Kampelman said the
Soviets have tentatively agreed
to a number of provisions for a
declaration winding up the con
ference These, he said, include
a specific reference to human
rights, which the Soviets
blocked at a similar conference
in 1977 in Belgrade, Yugoslavia
State loses
more money
SALEM
The state’s battered general
fund suffered another blow
Wednesday when officials
learned $2 million will have to be
found to implement a 1979 arbi
trator’s award to prison em
ployees
Gov. Vic Atiyeh said the
legislative Emergency Board
would be asked to take the $2
million out of a $20 million fund
set aside for all state emergen
cies this biennium
Atiyeh said that means less
money left for other agency
crises and “it's hard to
speculate on the effect."
The Oregon Supreme Court
decided Tuesday not to hear the
state's appeal of a May Court of
Appeals ruling which upheld the
1979 arbitrator's award to em
ployees at the Oregon State
Penitentiary and Oregon
Women's Correctional Center
Ultrasound offers
easier examination
NEW YORK
Dramatic improvements in the
use of ultrasound are making it
possible to examine a fetus al
most as easily as a newborn
baby, but some doctors are
making wrong diagnoses
becausej£ey are unfamiliar
with the technique, a researcher
said Wednesday
Dr Jason Birnholz, a
radiologist at the Harvard
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Medical School, said every
pregnant woman should be
given an ultrasound examina
tion, because it is safe and in
expensive and because it can
discover problems that don't
show up in any other test
But he cautioned that some
doctors now giving ultrasound
exams do not know how to in
terpret the test, and that they
are missing problems that an
expert would find
Coast Guard
allows tankers
SEATTLE
The Coast Guard apparently
will recommend that oil super
tankers be allowed on Western
Washington’s inland waters,
members of Washington state’s
congressional delegation an
nounced Wednesday
The Coast Guard plans to
publish in Thursday’s Federal
Register a notice indicating its
suggestion that the Department
of Transportation revise the
current 125,000-deadweight ton
limit on tankers in the area, Sen.
Henry Jackson said
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FLU VACCINATION
Vaccinations for influenza will be given at the University Student Health Center every
Wednesday, Thursday and Friday from 8:00 to 9:00 a m., beginning on October 21st and
continuing until the end of fall term
Students may receive the vaccine at a cost of $2 50 per injection.
Faculty and staff are charged $3 50 per injection.
Persons who have never received flu vaccine and who are under the age of 28 years need two
injections of vaccine four week apart. Persons over the age of 28 need only one injection.
If persons received one injection of the 1978-79, 1979-80 or 1980-81 vaccine, they would need
only one injection this year
Annual flu immunizations are especially advised for people with an increased risk of
complications from lower respiratory tract infections, including (1) Persons 65 years old and
older (2) Persons of any age over five months with any of the following: heart disease,
compromised lung functions, chronic kidney disease, diabetes, chronic severe anemia, and
conditions which compromise immune mechanisms For more information call the Student
Health Center at 686-4441.
Architecture Students
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All Books From Our Architecture Section Reduced
20% off retail price
October 19-24
Not applicable to text section
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