Oregon daily emerald. (Eugene, Or.) 1920-2012, April 12, 1982, Page 4, Image 4

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Gunman kills two in
Jerusalem mosque
JERUSALEM
A Jewish gunman shot his
way into the Mosque of Omar,
one of Islam's holiest shrines,
sniping at bystanders and
sparking riots that turned Je
rusalem's Easter Sunday into a
day of bloodshed with at least
two dead and dozens wounded
After a 30-minute shooting
spree on the hallowed Temple
Mount, the bearded assailant
was captured by the chief of
Jerusalem police who de
scribed the man as being of
American extraction. Police
said the man was Jewish
State-run Israel Radio iden
tified him as an American im
migrant, 38-year-old Alan Harry
Goodman. The police would not
confirm that information, but
said the assailant apparently
was an army reservist, dressed
in military uniform and fired an
M-16 automatic rifle.
The attack occurred within a
few hundred yards of thousands
of Christian pilgrims celebrating
Easter, and Jewish worshippers
crowded at the Wailing Wall,
Judaism's holiest shrine, for
Passover.
The assault on a holy site
revered by Moslems and Jews
alike shocked the nation and
sparked the bloodiest Moslem
riots in years.
National Police Chief Aryeh
Ivtsan said the man acted alone,
but Interior Minister Yosef Burg
ordered an urgent investigation
into whether he had accom
plices, Israel Radio said.
Police said two Arabs were
killed by the attacker and nine
people, including two Israeli
policemen, were wounded
either by the assailant or in the
rioting that broke out amid the
shooting
Firm overcharges
feds $5.5 million
DENVER
Federal auditors say a
company hired to manage an oil
reserve at Teapot Dome billed
the government for $5.5 million
in costs that were "ineligible for
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reimbursement,” the Denver
Post said Sunday in a copyright
story.
The Post said the U S.
Defense Contract Audit Agency
questioned the costs claimed by
Fenix & Scisson Inc., which
managed the 9.400-acre Naval
Petroleum Reserve No. 3, north
of Casper, Wyo., under a $102
million government contract
from 1976 until last year
The auditors were critical of
Fenix & Scisson's subcontract
ing, equipment purchases and
rentals and payroll practices at
Teapot Dome, the source of a
major governmental scandal
almost 60 years ago
The newspaper said it had
obtained a copy of the audit
agency's interim report, dated
Nov 23,1981, which detailed its
findings
The report showed total costs
claimed by Fenix & Scisson
from 1976 through October
1980 were $70,383,304, while
the audit agency declared
$5,507,990 of that amount in
eligible, the newspaper said
The largest amount ques
tioned by the agency — nearly
$4 million — was for sub
contracting The reasons in
cluded a lack of competitive
bidding, invoices submitted by
subcontractors that exceeded
the amounts authorized on
purchase orders and invoice
items not covered by purchase
orders
Fed deficit lower,
claim advocates
WASHINGTON
Tax-cut advocates within the
Reagan administration say
Budget Director David
Stockman may be suppressing
figures that suggest he has
overestimated the 1982 federal
deficit by as much as $30 billion
One administration official,
who did not want his name
used, said spending and reven
ue figures he has analyzed point
to a deficit of only $70 billion for
1982, not the record $100.5 bil
lion estimate Stockman issued
last Friday
The official complained that
the high deficit projections by
Stockman maintain the
momentum in Congress for an
increase in taxes and a cut in
military spending in 1983 — two
policy moves Pres Reagan has
resisted
"Congress has been rushing
toward a compromise, but if this
good news got out, it would
blow things out of the water and
the compromise vanishes," said
the official, a fervent believer in
the "supply-side" theory that
large tax cuts will stimulate the
economic growth needed to
balance the federal budget.
A Boston-based analyst for
the Heritage Foundation, a
conservative research group,
also concluded in an indepen
dent review that the 1982 deficit
might run $25 billion to $35 bil
lion below forecasts.
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