Alpineimport
/ /Service \x
Specialists in Volvo service
Owners
We offer a
preventive
maintenance/safety
inspection for
FREE
12th & Main, Sptd. • 72b-1808
Middle Eastern Kabobs
Monday Night Specialty
• Steak and Seafood
• Expanded Duck and Lamb menu
• Banquet room for up to 70 people
• Home catering available
(Belly dancer available upon
request for your banquet)
Lounge open 11.00 - closing
Lunch 11-2
Dinner Mon. Thurs. 5:00 - 9:00
Fri. & Sat. 5:00 - 9:30
Restaurant and Lounge
Reservations: 746-5241
117 S. 14th, Springfield
Corner 13th & Hilyard
across from the new
Sacred Heart addition
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Phone
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Special Peking Dinner For 2 or More
offer good Mon.-Thur.
Includes: Egg Flowers, Velvet soup
Appetizers: Fried Wonton
Fried Shrimps
Mar Far Chicken
Entree Chicken Almond
Sub Gum Chow Mein
Pineapple Sweet & Sour Pork
Barbecue Pork Fried Rice
Tea or Coffee & Fortune Cookies
Now Serving Beer, Wine
Try our
Special Lunch M-F
SAVE *2.00
$395
parson
Reg. $6.00
per person
& Cocktails
$-|95
(open 7 days a week from 11:30 to 10:00 p.m.)
December l2,3,$.9.iO
Robinson T heAt re &00 p.m.
for tickets am*> informAtiovi
caII 6*6-4191
4
inter/national
From Associated Press reports
Gunmen hit
Irish church
DARKLEY, Northern Ireland —
Two gunmen burst into a Protes
tant church during a Sunday night
worship service and opened fire
on the congregation with
automatic weapons, killing three
people and wounding at least
seven, police reported.
Sgt. Cyril Davidson, a police
spokesman in Belfast, said the
killers fled in a car driven by an ac
complice and police on both sides
of the Irish border launched a
search for them.
Davidson said the gunmen at
tacked during a prayer meeting at
the Mountain Lodge Pentecostal
Church in Darkley, a town in
County Armagh three miles north
of the border with the Irish
Republic.
“On the face of it, it looks like a
deliberate and naked sectarian at
tack," said a senior police officer
who asked not to be identified.
No group claimed responsiblity
for the assault, but police said it
appeared to be the work of guer
rillas of the the outlawed Irish
Republican Army or its Marxist of
fshoot, the Irish National Libera
tion Army.
Press Association, the British
domestic news agency, said local
residents believed the attack was
in retaliation for the killing of a
Roman Catholic, Adrian Carroll of
nearby Armagh, two weeks ago.
Soviet letter
warns Kohl
BONN — Soviet Pres. Yuri An
dropov sent a letter to Chancellor
Helmut Kohl, a spokesman for
Kohl said Sunday, the eve of
debate on the deployment of
NATO nuclear missiles in West
Germany.
Chancellery spokesman Alex
ander Allardt declined to reveal
what the letter from Andropov
said. But the conservative Ham
burg newspaper Bild am Sonntag
said the Soviet president warned
that the West German govern
ment must be prepared to “take
the consequences" if it goes
through with the missile
deployment.
The first battery of nine Per
shing II missiles could be placed
in West Germany as early as
Wednesday.
Kohl wrote to Andropov Oct. 29
to ask that the Soviets make a new
proposal at the Geneva arms talks
on medium-range missiles.
Kohl will be the first speaker in
the Parliament debate Monday.
He is a staunch supporter of the
deployment and his governing
coalition has a 58-seat majority in
Parliament, so the missile plan is
expected to win approval. The
chancellor says the parliament s
1981 approval was sufficient and
this new vote — expected Tuesday
— is not necessary.
At a Social Democratic con
ference Saturday the opposition
party voted to reject the missiles,
over the protests of former
Chancellor Helmut Schmidt, who
said the new deployment was the
best way to convince the Soviets
to stop what he called "one-sided,
unprovoked armament.'
Casey admits
to holdings
WASHINGTON — CIA Director
William Casey says he had stock
in 13 companies with CIA con
tracts ranging in value from $12 to
$3,995,774.
In a letter published Sunday,
Casey also said he "was not in any
way involved in nor did I have any
knowledge of any of the business
these companies did with the CIA
or the decisions of my investment
adviser to acquire shares in these
companies."
Of the five companies with the
largest CIA sales, Casey said,
"Their CIA business was an in
finitesimal portion of their
muiltibillion-dollar total sales.”
The letter, published in The
Washington Post and verified by
CIA spokesman Dale Peterson,
was Casey's first response to CIA
documents released as a result of
a Freedom of Information Act
lawsuit.
Neither the documents nor
Casey's letter identified the com
panies with such contracts.
Crew battles
diesel spill
NEWPORT — Coast Guard
crews fought Sunday to clean up
600 gallons of diesel fuel spilled
off Newport when a 350-foot
japanese freighter ran aground
and split in half after its 19
crewmen were rescued by
helicopter.
The Blue Magpie was blown on
to the rock jetty at the entrance to
Yaquina Bay, about a mile off
shore, during a storm Saturday
night after disobeying Coast
Guard instructions not to try to
enter the harbor.
A three-man helicopter crew
from North Bend battled in the
dark against high winds and heavy
seas to rescue the Korean crew.
A Coast Ciuara spokesman said
he wouldn’t know until Monday
who the ship's owners or agents
were but that one of them would
be liable for the costs of the
cleanup, estimated early Sunday
at $50,000.
Except for the fuel, the ship was
empty when it ran aground. The
Coast Guard said the captain ask
ed permission to enter the harbor
and was advised not to, but ap
parently did not understand those
instructions.
Rodrigues said inspection crews
did not think any more of the
94,000 gallons of fuel on board
would spill. Fuel that did spill pos
ed the risk of contaminating more
seabirds at a sanctuary off Ya
quina Head, about four miles
north of the grounding.
He said the wreckage shifted
during the night and was no
longer interfering with the naviga
tion lane into the harbor.
Father kills
family, self
PORTLAND — A young girl who
summoned help too late to pre
vent her father from executing all
five members of his family died
with the telephone still in her
hand, police said Sunday.
Robert Galloway, 52, shot
himself in the head and died early
Saturday with his hand covering
the 38-caliber pistol on his chest
that police think was used to kill
his wife, his daughter, three sons
and the family dog.
Police said their conversations
with friends and business
associates provided little informa
tion about what motivated
Galloway, who owned what was
called one of the most successful
remodeling companies in the
country.
"They were living the American
dream,” said Galloway's attorney,
Arthur Tarlow. "They were an all
American family."
Police rushed to the family
home just outside city limits in
southwest Portland after Lori
Galloway, 1b, telephoned just
after 4 a.m. and said, "My father's
shot me in the neck."
Moments after arriving, they
heard a single gunshot. They
entered the house to find
Galloway, his wife, Mary Lou, 44,
Lori and Larry, 12.
Hours later, a business associate
found James Galloway, 20, and his
brother Ronald, 14, dead at the of
fices of J&J Remodeling, the family
business several miles away.
Morley Margolis, sales manager
for the firm who found the boys'
bodies, said the two older boys
and their father began sleeping in
the office on weekends after two
recent burglaries there.
MUPC/Encore Present
THE TUBES
Thursday
December 1 y
9:00 p.m. ^
Gill Coliseum
OSU, Corvallis
With BILLY RANCHER & THE UNREAL GODS
Produced by db Entertainment
KJm/AmKar 198 ■