Oregon daily emerald. (Eugene, Or.) 1920-2012, November 16, 1983, Section A, Page 4, Image 4

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From Associated Press reports
Cyprus split
by partition
NICOSIA, Cyprus — Turkish
held northern Cyprus declared in
dependence Tuesday and sealed
off the only crossing point to the
Greek Cypriot south, escalating
tension between Greece and
Turkey over the Mediterranean
island.
The Cypriot government in the
south appealed for British and
Greek help and sought an
emergency U.N. session to con
demn and reverse the decision,
which appeared to formalize the
unofficial partition of Cyprus that
resulted from the Turkish invasion
of 1974.
Turkey formally recognized the
new northern regime, but Greece
demanded that the Common
Market and North Atlantic Treaty
Organization denounce the in
dependence declaration, which
the Greek government called
"unacceptable."
Britain, the former colonial
authority on Cyprus, also de
nounced the declaration, and the
United States expressed dismay.
"We have consistently opposed
a unilateral declaration of in
dependence by the Turkish
Cypriot community, believing it
would not be helpful to the pro
cess of finding a final negotiated
settlement to the Cyprus pro
blem," the State Department in
Washington said.
Cyprus Pres. Spyros Kyprianou
blamed the Turkish government
for the development, declaring it
showed "that the intention of the
Turkish side was always to create
faits accompli and conditions for
the secession of the occupied area
from the republic of Cyprus."
"The action taken by the illegal
regime in the occupied area
should be condemned by
everybody throughout the world.
Every effort should be made to
neutralize and reverse it," he said.
ERA revival
rejected
WASHINGTON — The House,
on a 278-147 vote that fell six short
of the required two-thirds majori
ty, rejected on Tuesday a propos
ed revival of the Equal Rights
Amendment to the Constitution.
The tally overrode impassioned
pleas of the Democratic leader
ship and followed last-minute
threats by special interest groups
on both sides to judge lawmakers
at the ballot box next year solely
by their votes on the issue.
Voting for the ERA were 225
Democrats and 53 Republicans,
while 109 Republicans and 38
Democrats opposed it.
The amendment, which reads
simply that "Equality of rights
under the law shall not be denied
or abridged by the United States
or by any state on account of sex,"
has twice cleared Congress but
fell three states short of ratifica
tion — with 38 needed by last
year's deadline.
The ERA went down this time
after Republicans assailed the
Democratic leadership for trying
to shortcut the legislation without
giving members a chance to
amend it and with only 40 minutes
of debate.
The lawmakers rejected a final
appeal by House Speaker Thomas
O'Neill, D-Mass., who urged sup
port for the ERA without an anti
abortion rider "in fairness to the
women of America."
Until O'Neill approved the
shortcut, Rep. lames Sensenbren
ner, R-Wis., stood ready to in
troduce an amendment that
would have ensured continuation
of laws restricting government
financing of abortions to cases
where a woman's life is
endangered.
Sensenbrenner also planned to
offer an amendment that would
have prevented use of the ERA to
draft women and send them into
combat.
O'Neill said without the no
amendment rule, the anti
abortion forces likely would have
won.
Mushroom
hunt begins
ALBANY — The hunting season
is on, but animals aren't the prey.
Instead, the quarry is mushrooms
containing the hallucinogen
psilocybin.
The chemical is said to produce
sensations similar to those from
LSD.
Each year, when fall rains soak
fields in the mid-Willamette
Valley, law enforcement agencies
report numerous calls of com
plaints from farmers who say
fences have been broken down
and livestock let loose by the
mushroom hunters.
Bill Denison of the Oregon State
University Botany Department
said Western Oregon is probably
home to a dozen species of
mushrooms containing some sort
of hallucinogen, but those
nicknamed "liberty caps" are the
most popular variety for
mushroom hunters.
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