Image provided by: University of Oregon Libraries; Eugene, OR
About Oregon daily emerald. (Eugene, Or.) 1920-2012 | View Entire Issue (Oct. 21, 1983)
AipSneimport ' /Service \ ^ Spetialists in Volvo service Owners We offer a preventive maintenance/safety inspection for FREE 12th & Main, Spld • 726-1808 Copy Time is now Copy King across from the Bookstore Self Service Copies 34 for £ 8V2 x 11 Open 7 Days a Week Monday - Saturday 7:30 a.m. - 8:30 p.m. Sunday 12 - 4 p.m. iipipipipip^sipipipipipipipipipipipipipipii ipip^ipipipipipipipipipipipipip^ipipipipipip I | i-ifXLL Irtematonal House at Pancates -1 We've remodeled our restaurant and added new items to our menu including speciality sandwiches. Enjoy one of our nine Specialty Sandwiches for Lunch or Dinner Soon. Speciality Sandwiches Hamburger Club Sandwiches A limted double decker of ground beet, bar on, letlut e, tomatp and mayonnaise Served with natural < ut tries and pickle chips International Club Deluxe A double decker \andwn h combination ot turkey breast, baton, lettut e. tomato and mayonnaise on white toast Served with natural t ut tries and pit kle chips Steak Sandwich A U.S.D.A. Choice steak served on toast wedges, at < ompanted with nalural-r ut fries and fresh Iruit garnish Tuna Melt Deluxe A grilled i ombindtion ot lurid sdtdd dnd Aniern dn i heese with natural i ut tries and Iresh Iruit garnish Grilled Cheese Sandwich American cheese on while bread with natural-rut tries and Iresh Iruit /famish. Sliced Turkey Sandwich White meat ot turkey with tenure and mayonnaise Served with natural cut tries and fresh fruit /famish Tuna Salad Sandwich Served on toast, it desired, with naturals ut tries anti iresh Iruit /famish Ham and Swiss Cheese Thinly shr ed ham and naturally affed Swiss r heese /(rilled on rye bread Served with natural<ut tries and Iresh Iruit garnish Hot Turkey Sandwich Slices ot turkey bread served open-faced topped with turkey gravy and served with potatoes and cranberry saut e OPEN 24 HOURS STUDENTS-Use your magic card to recalve: 20% Off Reg. Price all day Mon • Frt. and after 2 p,m. on Sat. & Sun. 10% Off Reg. Price Sat and Sun. before 2 p m International House of Pancakes Restaurant 355 E Broadway, Eugene, 345-9976 tame 4. Section A inter/national from Asiocuted frms rrporls Man claims four killings EUGENE — A murder warrant has been issued for a former orderly at a nursing home here who is accused of killing three old people and a young accident vic tim with insulin injections in 1979, police said. Police in Nebraska say the man told them he killed the people because he wanted to put them out of their misery and confessed 'so it wouldn't happen to anyone else." The warrant was issued Wednesday for Otha Harrison Hart, 33, who remains in custody today in Lincoln, Neb., said Sgt. Mike Cline of the Eugene Police Department. Cline added that the informa tion gathered in the case so far supports Hart’s claims. Three of the victims died at the nursing home. The fourth victim died at his home, where Hart worked as a nursing aide, Cline said. Cline said the fact that two of the victims died on the same day "adds more weight" to what Hart said. In his statement to police. Hart said he felt sorry for the four pa tients and described their deaths as mercy killings, according to the Lincoln Journal. Hart had been working as an orderly in a Lincoln nursing home for about four weeks. He went to police Tuesday morning and told of his purported involvement in the Eugene deaths, Lincoln Police Lt. Ken Ideen said. "There were no indications whatever of foul play" in any deaths at the Lincoln nursing home since the man began work ing there, Ideen said. Deputy Lane County Medical Ex aminer Ken Champion said the deaths of the three elderly pa tients and the younger person were officially listed as being due to natural causes. Autopsies would not reveal any traces of insulin, Champion said, because the victims probably were embalmed before they were buried. "The whole thing will hinge on whether or not they can verify this guy's story," Champion said, "from what they get from local charts and what they get from local physicians." CIA funds cut by vote WASHINGTON — A bitterly divided House on Thursday voted for the second time in three mon ths to cut off CIA support for Nicaraguan counter revolutionaries. The 227-194 vote, largely along party lines, was near ly identical to the earlier tally. Like the first cut-off proposal, the new one is seen as unlikely to win approval in the Republican controlled Senate. The House vote came after a heated debate in which each side acused the other of risking deeper U.S. involvement in Central America's wars. "Military victory is the ad ministration's bottom line," charged Rep. Edward Boland, D Mass., chairman of the House In telligence Committee, about the expanding CIA backing for Nicaraguan "contras" — or counter-revolutionaries. Boland, sponsor of the cut-off amendment, said the Reagan ad ministration must stop "waging war in Nicaragua. And make no mistake about it, this is exactly what the United States is doing." But Republicans said the covert action had succeeded in pressur ing the Nicaraguan Sandinista government to curtail its support for leftist guerrillas in El Salvador and to accept new peace pro posals from the so-called Con tadora nations — Mexico, Colom bia, Venezuela and Panama. Further, declared Rep. C. William Whitehurst, R-Va., an in telligence committee member, if the covert action is stopped, "before this decade is out, you will see American blood spilled in ways no one can imagine." He suggested that if the covert action was stopped it could lead to direct U.S. military intervention. The amendment to the 1984 in telligence authorization bill would eliminate the covert aid and replace it with $50 million in open assistance to help pro-U.S. nations in the region stop leftist gun running. Camping on a budget YAKIMA — Yakima County Chief Criminal Deputy Marion Baugher says the Brooks family of Searcy, Ark., had enough money with them to pay a $7.50 fee for camping in a state park — and avoid arrest. The family was taken into custody last weekend for failing to pay the fee at Sportsman's Park near Yakima. When Freddie Brooks, 34, his wife, Kathy, and his brother, Gene, were booked into the coun ty tail, they had $15 and some change between them, Baugher said. When they were arrested, they said they did not pay the fee because of a lack of money. Freddie Brooks later acknowledged the family had a lit tle more than $15 when members got to town, but said if he had paid the park fee, he wouldn't have had enough money to buy gas for a job search. After the arrests, the Brooks' 10-year-old boy, Bobby, was turn ed over to state Child Protection officials, their dog was put in the pound and their three vehicles, two cars and a motorcycle, were impounded. The Brooks tamily later was released from jail, and their boy and dog, a 1-year-old pit bull named Smokey, were returned. "They were given every chance to leave or go to the mission," said Steve Middleton, Sportsman's Park assistant ranger. Middleton said Freddie Brooks used abusive language and refused to leave. For the Finest Selection of Fall and Winter Clothing - See Us |E ^1*71C “Eugene’s Professional Outfitter" 771 Willamette and Valley River Center OUTFITTERS Use Your Magic Card Jacket Sale in Progress