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About Oregon daily emerald. (Eugene, Or.) 1920-2012 | View Entire Issue (Sept. 29, 1982)
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Bargain Round Trip Fares Portland - Chicago $249 Portland - New York $343 Eugene - Denver $273 San Francisco - Frankfurt $688 •Some fares subject to certain restrictions 683-5577 Diamond A Cut or Sliced v^lu ui oncea "m m Green Beansy89C Diamond A Diced or Shoestrinq Beets 16 02 Diamond A Whole Kernel or Creamstyle Corn 17oz Diamond A Peas 1 7 02 Diamond A Applesauce 3 /100 16oz m Gold Medal Flour 10 lb bag Bleached or Unbleached Star Kist Tuna Water or Oil 6 V, oz Fleischmann Corn Oil Margarine 99 quarters 16 oz Pepsi or Seven Up 6 pack Vi liter $1 78 + dep Drive-N-Save Sugar $998 10 lb bag Olympia Beer 12 pack-12 oz tins $095 + dep USDA Choice Round Steak Full cut bone in Tyson Chicken Weiners 12 oz 58 ea Red Delicious, Golden Delicious or Newton Apples locally grown 39 lb ( 2370 W. 11th at City View DRIVEN-SAVE CONVENIENT LOCATIONS 0pm > am to > p.m. lf jumto » pjm. Sundays Prices Effective Wed September 29 thru Tims. m mvfmmu — D [ Israeli soldiers leave Beirut, [ Marine arrival expected soon From the Associated Press I l \ Israeli troops and armor eva luated from Beirut's harbor j* Tuesday and prepared to leave ' the airport after resolving a dis pute with the United States f which cleared the way for 1,200 f Marine peacekeepers to land f Meanwhile, the Israeli P government approved a fuII „• scale judicial inquiry into the 1 massacre of Palestinians in I west Beirut and the PLO chief : of staff, Brig Saad Sayel, was p reported ambushed and killed in » eastern Lebanon j "We are expecting the Amer ' icans in the next 48 hours We l told them they could land at the f airport, if the Lebanese ‘government agreed it was OK pwith us," said Lt. Col. Yaacov t Perez, deputy spokesman at the ^ Israeli military headquarters in ^ Baabda, five miles east of Bei rut. Diplomatic sources in Beirut said the Marines' landing was delayed because the Israelis had insisted on keeping an air traffic controller at the airport even when the Marines arrived But U S diplomatic sources in Tel Aviv said the dispute was resolved and that the American contingent of the multinational force would probably be able to deploy in Beirut Wednesday as scheduled Israeli authorities were not available to confirm the resolu tion of the dispute, though the Tel Aviv command said Israeli troops would leave west Beirut on Wednesday as promised Israel radio reported that U S Ambassador Morris Draper met with Maj. Gen. Amir Drori, head of Israel's northern command, for talks on the airport dispute Details were not immediately available. The United States insisted that Israeli troops leave west Beirut before the Marines landed in the Lebanese capital, and the Marines' scheduled arrival there last Sunday was put off until Israel announced its readiness to leave About 100 Israeli soldiers, along with personnel carriers, jeeps and trucks rolled out of the Beirut harbor area Tuesday The departure of the Israelis left French, Italian and Leba nese forces in sole control of the port for the first time since Israeli forces invaded west Beirut on Sept 15, one day after the assassination of then Pres - elect Bashir Gemayel French paratroopers and Italian infantrymen took up po sitions in and around the Sabra and Chatilla refugee camps to help the newly reconstructed Lebanese army with security and to prevent the recurrence of the Sept 16-18 massacre of hundreds of men, women and children in the camps. In Jerusalem, Prime Minister Menachem Begin s government decided to set up a full-scale judicial inquiry into Israel's con duct during the massacre at Sabra and Chatilla Cabinet Secretary Dan Me ridor said the government was giving the investigating commit tee a free hand to probe any question related to the killings in the camps and to call any wit ness, including ministers and generals, to testify under oath Radio reports quoting the Palestinian news agency WAFA said Sayel was assassinated in an ambush early Tuesday while driving from Rayak to Baalbeck, in eastern Lebanon Egypt applauds Reagan stand UNITED NATIONS (AP) - Egypt urged the Reagan administration Tuesday to take a firmer stand in the Middle East and to "promptly restrain Israel as President Eisenhower did" during the 1956-57 Suez crisis Butros Ghali, Egypt's minister of state for foreign affairs, in an address to the U N General Assembly also called on Israel and the Palestine Liberation Organization to reassess their mutually antagonistic policies Despite "tragic events" in Lebanon and elsewhere in the Middle East. Ghali said hope for a fair settlement of the Arab-lsr aell conflict "has not yet been extinguished " Ghali hailed as "foremost" among recent positive develop ments Pres Ronald Reagan s plan for a "broader peace" in the Middle East, announced Sept 1, which provides for Palestinian self-government under Jordanian authority It was, Ghali said, a "major step forward towards a just solution of the Palestinian question and a |ust and comprehensive sett lement "