Oregon daily emerald. (Eugene, Or.) 1920-2012, November 17, 1983, Page 4, Image 4

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poppi s
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t
PASTERNAK’S SECOND BIRTH:
POETICS AND SOCIALISM
A free public lecture by Soviet emigre
ALEXANDER ZHOLKOVSKY
(Department of Russian Literature, Cornell University)
THURSDAY, NOVEMBER 17,1983
7:00 p.m. 101 Erb Memorial Union
Prof. Zholkovsky, who emigrated from the Soviet Union in 1979, will speak on the evolution of Pasternak's
poetic world with respect to his acceptance of socialism. The topic addresses questions on-the interrelation of
art and politics in the USSR.
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From Awocutrd Prr» reports
Compromise
bill passed
WASHINGTON — Congress
passed and sent to the White
House Wednesday a compromise
bill to extend the life of the U.S.
Civil Rights Commission for five
years, but change its makeup.
Pres. Ronald Reagan has already
pledged to sign the bill, a com
promise between civil rights
groups, liberal and conservative
lawmakers and the White House.
The House passed the measure
by voice vote. It was approved by
the Senate earlier.
Until the compromise was forg
ed last week, the continued life of
the commission was threatened
by a dispute over Reagan's control
of the agency.
Reagan claimed the right to
dismiss commissioners who
disagreed with him, and the
dispute became especially bitter
with his recent firing of three
commission members who op
posed his policies.
Under the new plan, the com
mission will have eight members
instead of six and be equally divid
ed between Democrats and
Republicans. Four of the new
members will be appointed by the
president while the remaining
four will be appointed by Con
gress. They will serve six-year
terms and can be fired only for
neglect of duty or malfeasance.
PLO forced
out of Tripoli
TRIPOLI — Guerrilla mutineers
drove Yasser Arafat's fighters out
of their last Mideast stronghold in
fierce hand-to-hand combat at the
Baddawi refugee camp
Wednesday.
At the same time, Israeli jets
flew reprisal raids against Moslem
extremist bases in Lebanon's
Bekaa Valley.
Unconfirmed radio reports said
100 were killed and 600 wounded
in the final Syrian-backed
onslaught on Baddawi, and that 33
were killed and 80 wounded in the
Israeli air strikes on the )anta and
Shaara camps in the Bekaa Valley,
just three miles from the Syrian
border.
''They entered the camp in the
early afternoon," said one
Palestine Liberation Organization
official who asked not to be nam
ed. Eventually, we had to get out.
We can't match them."
The official said that some
clashes continued on the
southern edge of Baddawi after
nightfall, but "very limited."
Arafat appeared at his head
quarters in Tripoli early in the
afternoon, but made no public
statement. He left the head
quarters a few minutes later,
along with his military adviser.
Khalil Wa/ir, for another location
in Tripoli.
The beleagured Arafat has said
he will leave Tripoli only when he
has guarantees of safety for his
fighters and Palestinian civilians.
He has given his probable destina
tion as Tunis, where he set up
headquarters 15 months ago after
the Israelis forced him and his
guerrillas out of Beirut. Beirut
radio said the mutineers were led
by Ahmed Jibril, the head of a
small, radical PLO faction backed
by both Syria and Libya, which ac
cuse Arafat of abandoning military
struggle against Israel. The attack
began with a Syrian artillery
assault, followed by either a
Syrian or rebel tank charge.
At least 1,000 people were
reported killed in the first week of
the PLO war in Tripoli, which
broke out Nov. 3. On Nov. 6 the
mutineers overran the loyalist
camp of Nahr el-Bared, and
Arafat's men fled to Baddawi. It
was not known how many
loyalists were in Baddawi when
the mutineers fought their way in.
Buses run;
strike holds
PORTLAND — Greyhound plans
to resume bus service to Oregon's
three largest cities Thursday.
The limited service will include
four daily runs between Portland
to Salem and Eugene and three
daily runs between Portland to
Seattle.
New drivers, replacing those on
strike, made dry runs from
Portland to Eugene and Seattle
Tuesday to familiarize themselves
with the routes and the machines
they will be operating.
"Our new drivers are getting
thoroughly acquainted with their
routes and also finishing up their
classroom training," said Don
Miller, Greyhound district
manager in Portlanad.
Miller wouldn't say how many
new drivers would be operating
buses in the state Thursday.
However, he said about 150 peo
ple either were interviewed or ap
plied for driver positions Tuesday.
"I have no doubt we'll have
more than enough drivers for our
needs," he said.
Local 1055 spokesmen said six of
their 600 members had crossed
picket lines and returned to work
Monday in response to an
ultimatum from the company that
they go back to their jobs or be
replaced.
Earthquake
hits Hawaii
HILO, Hawaii —A strong earth
quake jolted the island of Hawaii
on Wednesday, damaging homes,
breaking gas and water lines and
disrupting telephone service. Four
people suffered minor injuries.
The quake, which struck at 6:13
а. m. (11:13 a.m. EST), registered
б. 7 on the Richter scale, said the
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Pacific Tsunami Warning Center
in Honolulu. Some residents said
it lasted a full minute.
“It was terrible. The house
shook like mad; I thought it was
going to come down on me," said
Martha McNicoll of Hilo. "My
house is a mess, everything is
broken. I thought it would never
quit."
It was centered on the
southwest flank of Mauna Loa
Volcano, about 70 miles
southwest of Hilo, and did not
generate a great wave on the
Pacific, the center said. The quake
was not an indication of an immi
nent eruption of Mauna Loa, said
John Erickson, spokesman for
Hawaii Volcanos National Park.
Scientists are predicting a major
eruption at Mauna Loa within the
next year.
Foat found
innocent
GRETNA — A jury found Califor
nia feminist leader Ginny Foat in
nocent Wednesday of murdering
an Argentine businessman 18
years ago, rejecting as lies the
testimony by her ex-husband who
had implicated her.
"Thank you, thank you,
everyone," Foat, 42, said to
friends and supporters who
cheered in the packed state
District Court chamber as the jury
returned its verdict after less than
two hours of deliberations.
The six-man, six-woman jury
had gotten the case after a plea
from Foat's attorneys to look on
John Sidote, her ex-husband and
the prosecution’s star witness, as
"a crazy man and a liar."
Foat was charged with clubbing
Argentine toymaker Moises
Chayo to death with a tire iron in a
New Orleans suburb in 1965 while
robbing him of $1,400 cash.
Jurors said the verdict was
unanimous for acquittal on the
first vote.
"We covered all the angles.
There was no disagreement,"
juror Anna Marie Whited said.
"We voted. There was just one
vote."
Flad the jury found her guilty of
murder, she could have been
sentenced to life in prison. A
manslaughter verdict could have
brought a 21-year term.
Sidote testified that Foat lured
Chayo out of the bar, and the two
of them killed him after robbing
him of the money he carried to
pay his son's hospital bill.
Sidote, serving an unrelated
prison term in Nevada, was pro
mised immunity from prosecution
in the Chayo case in return for his
cooperation.
Assistant District Attorney Tom
Porteous said the jury was being
misled if it accepted Foat's at
tempts to picture herself as a
weak person dominated by so
meone else.
He accused her of lying during
her two days on the stand.
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