Oregon daily emerald. (Eugene, Or.) 1920-2012, May 16, 1985, Page 4A, Image 4

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Read The
Friday Edition
Page 4A
beat
Philly fire toll reaches 11
PHILADELPHIA (AP) — Five more in
cinerated bodies and a cache of weapons were
found Wednesday in the ruins of a radical
cult’s fortified rowhouse by police who search
ed the debris with heavy machinery and long
handled prongs.
That find — which included the bodies of
two children — increased the death toll to 11.
Two other children were among the six bodies
found Tuesday in the ruins of the house once
occupied by the MOVE cult.
“We're taking one shovel at a time,” said
police spokesman Lt. Jerry Whartenby. “We’re
looking for any kind of evidence to tell us what
went on, any more bodies that may or may not
be there, weapons, ammo, things of that sort.’
The five bodies found Wednesday were
wrapped in canvas body bags and taken to the
city morgue for study, according to Clarence
Mosley, the city’s assistant city managing
director.
Police assaulted the house on Monday
with bullets, water hoses, tear gas and finally a
two-pound bomb. An ensuing fire burned 61
homes and uprooted at least 225 residents of
the west Philadelphia neighborhood.
Meanwhile, Mayor Wilson Goode again
defended his plan to evict the radicals and
took full responsibility for the result.
“The whole purpose of the operation was
to preserve life. What happened was an acci
dent. There will not be any scapegoats. I am
fully and totally responsible,” he said at a
news conference.
OSU next stop
for David Chan
CORVALLIS (AP) — A
Playboy magazine
photographer is coming to
Oregon State University next
week but, unlike other cam
puses in the Pacific 10 Con
ference, no women’s groups are
planning to stage protests.
Some women, however, say
they’ll try to get an interview
with photographer David Chan
to express their disapproval
privately.
Instead of staging a protest,
the Oregon State Women’s
Center plans to hold a discus
sion — “Having your picture
taken or pornography?” — at
7:30 p.m. Monday.
Cash
For Textbooks
Mon. • Fri.
Smith Family
Bookstore
768 E. 13th
1 Block From Campus
345-1651
House Democrats propose ’86 budget
containing big cuts in defense spending
WASHINGTON (AP) —
House Democrats Wednesday
formally proposed a 1986
federal budget that would cut
spending by $56 billion, slicing
deeply into President Ronald
Reagan’s defense buildup but
safeguarding the cost-of-living
increase in Social Security
benefits.
The $967 billion spending
plan calls for no tax increases,
freezes spending on most
domestic programs and pro
vides for deeper cuts in others,
such as transportation and ur
ban aid. Programs for low
income people, such as
Medicaid and welfare, would be
protected against cuts.
The Democratic plan would
deny the Pentagon any increase
in spending authority next year,
although actual spending
would rise by $15 billion.
The GOP budget, endorsed by
Reagan, also calls for $56
billion in cuts without raising
taxes. But it would cancel next
year’s cost-of-living increases
for recipients of Social Security
and other government pension
programs, while spending more
on defense and less on domestic
programs than the Democratic
blueprint.
In all, the Democratic plan
would cut spending by an
estimated $56 billion next year
— divided almost evenly bet
ween defense and domestic ac
counts — and $259 billion over
three years. Gray put the deficit
in 1988 at $120 billion if the
plan is approved.
Coffee Bean of the Month
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HAYWARD
COLEMAN
A SILENT PORTRAYAL OF
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Mr. Coleman studied in Paris
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His most recent appearances
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TONIGHT
Condon School
8 p.m.
FREE
Eugene’s finest new deli eatery invites you to try
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13th
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683-5577
ROUND TRIP BARGAIN FARES
AT THE TOP OF THE STAIRS
Portland-New York.$258
Portland-Miami.$258
Eugene-San Diego.$198
Portland-Lima, Peru.$776
•Fares subject to certain restrictions
Thursday, May 16, 1985