Oregon daily emerald. (Eugene, Or.) 1920-2012, September 29, 1983, Page 4, Image 4

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    All candy bars 25* on
ANNIVERSARY
SALE!
Complete 10 Gallon
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Includes: Complete filter,
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Silver Veil Angelfish, reg 2 29 $1.39
Black Neon Tetra, reg 99 59c
Dwarf Frogs, reg 2 49 $1.49
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COMETS
Net Your Own
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ZEBRA FINCHES
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BRINE SHRIMP
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TUBE FEEDER
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inter/national
From Associated Press reports
Irate Soviet
blames U.S.
MOSCOW — President Yuri V.
Andropov, in his first statement,
on the downed South Korean
airliner, called the incident a
"sophisticated provocation"
masterminded by U.S. in
telligence and used to push more
military spending through
Congress.
Andropov, in a statement read
over the evening news, endorsed
previous Soviet declarations, in
sisting the plane was sent on a spy
mission by the United States. A
Soviet fighter-jet shot the plane
down in Soviet airspace Sept. 1
and all 269 people aboard were
killed.
Andropov's statement, carried
by the official news agency Tass,
also dismissed President Reagan's
latest arms reduction proposals.
Attacking what he called the
"grandiloquent speech" Reagan
made Monday to the U.N. General
Assembly, Andropov urged that
no one should be taken in by the
U.S. president's assurances that
"a nuclear war cannot be won and
.must never be fought."
Reagan wins
House vote
WASHINGTON — The House
approved President Reagan's pro
posed war powers compromise
with Congress by a 270-161 vote
Wednesday, authorizing him to
keep U.S. Marines in Lebanon for
as long as 18 months.
The House handily approved
the resolution, avoiding a con
stitutional confrontation with the
president over terms of the 1973
War Powers Act, after Speaker
Thomas P. O'Neill |r. appealed for
bipartisan action to help bring
peace to Lebanon with the help of
the 1,600 Marines.
"I ask you to act today to help
the president bring peace and
stab.'ity to Lebanon," the speaker
said.
Acknowledging that many
House members believed 18 mon
ths was too long to allow the
Marines to remain in Beirut,
O'Neill said the compromise
measure was "not a blank check
as some have asserted.
"On the contrary, it establishes
unprecedented restraints on the
deployment and mission of U S.
armed forces overseas," he said.
"It clearly limits the scope and
role of U.S. forces in Lebanon so
that the danger of a Vietnam-type
escalation is avoided."
Veto blocks
sale of coal
WASHINGTON — A federal
judge, in one of the first cases in
terpreting the Supreme Court s
ruling on the one-house
legislative veto, issued an order
Wednesday blocking Interior
Secretary lames Watt from selling
federal coal in North Dakota.
The ruling by U.S. District Judge
Louis Oberdorfer would prevent
Watt from escaping a pending
congressional moratorium on coal
sales by issuing the leases before
Saturday.
Oberdorfer granted a request
for an emergency order made by
attorneys for the House of
Representatives and two en
vironmental groups, who con
tended that Watt was trying to
thwart the will of the courts and
Congress by rushing to issue
leases covering 140 million tons of
North Dakota coal.
Court finds
doctor guilty
EL PASO — Twelve jurors, one of
them pregnant, heard testimony
Wednesday to determine the
sentence of a doctor convicted of
murdering a fetus during a 1979
abortion, even though the corpse
was never found.
Dr. Raymond Showery, 55, was
found guilty Tuesday after 1 Vi
hours of deliberation. Prosecutor
Carol Pennock said it was believ
ed to be the first case in the nation
where a physician was convicted
of murder even though there was
no corpse.
His sentence could range from
five years to life in prison.
Five former Family Hospital of El
Paso employees testified during
the nine-day trial that Showery
pulled the fetus from an uniden
tified woman during an abortion,
then smothered and drowned the
3- to 6-pound fetus.
The fetus — believed by nurses
to be 5 to 7 months old — was
dropped into a plastic bag that
was thrown away and never
found, prosecutors said. No
records of the abortion, which
Showery claimed never took
place, were found.
Hospital witnesses said the fetus
was probably old enough to sur
vive outside the womb.
Syria wants
troops out
UNITED NATIONS — Syria's
foreign minister told the United
States and other Western nations
Wednesday they should withdraw
their peacekeeping troops from
Lebanon because they are "pos
ing a grave threat to security and
peace" in the Middle East.
"They remind us of the col
onialist expeditions through
previous stages of the history of
the region," Abdul Halim Khad
dam said, referring to the
5,400-member force made up of
U.S. Marines and troops from
France, Italy and Britain.
He said the May 17 Lebanese
Israeli troop withdrawal agree
ment, which the United States
helped negotiate, violates
Lebanese sovereignty and should
be considered "null and void."
NAT IO N AI. NI: Ilf S - WEEKEND EDITION
STUDENTS RATE
$1£9S
PUR DAY
UNLIMITED FREE MILEAGE
Rate available from noon Thursday
to noon Monday.
Certain daily minimums apply.
Ask for details.
We feature GM
cars like this
Chevrolet Chevette.
Students rate with us. If you’re 18 or older,
all you need to rent from us is your cur
rent student I.D., valid driver's license and
cash deposit. Most major credit cards
accepted but not required. You pay for gas
and return the car to the renting location.
Son-discountable rate applies to
this or similar-size car and is subject to change without notice. Specific cars subject to availability.
Ifou deserve National attentions
National Car Rental
Available at:
620 W. Burnside (Portland). 228-6637
Portland International Airport. 249-4900
Medford-Jackson County Airport. 779-4763
Mahlon-Sweet Airfield (Eugene).688-8161