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About Oregon daily emerald. (Eugene, Or.) 1920-2012 | View Entire Issue (Jan. 6, 1986)
Vegetarian Dining at its Best • » * VEGETARIAN Rl M U R \M 270 W. 8th Mon-Thu r. 11:30am-7:30pm 342-4335 Fri. 11 30-2:00pm NEW, EUGENE, FOREIGN, GRADUATE OR REGISTERED ' . STUDENTS ■ . COME USE US (even when you're healthy) WE'RE HERE TO SERVE YOU YOUR Student Health Center ext. 4441 i w; ■XX XX M bally Emera; i ODE Oregon Dally Emerald ODE 6reqon Dally Emerald Dally Emerald ODE Oregon Dally Emerald ODE Oregon Daily Emerald ODE Daily Emerald ODE Oregon Daily Emerald OPE Oregon Daily f <fjm you' AMo (opwff *' 1 fro™ **'*!? .■SSJSS . T *iO 1 ,< •o' sSSSS O '■»* ”■’■ Ftoro yw' ex n*xj»»"'e , 04' p,oc* 0*C ■*!** . M»«e lavofrte f one *1 National Guards tell gruesome tales MOUNDSVILLE, W.Va. (AP) - One of the guards held hostage by rioting prisoners was forc ed to watch as jeering inmates "carved up" a prisoner accused of being an informer and another guard saw an inmate "butchered," othor guards said Sunday. "They made him watch. They put on a show for him.” one guard said. The body of inmate Kent Slie, a convicted child molester and killer, was then dragged up and down a cellbiock as other prisoners kicked and spit on it. said guards who spoke on condi tion of anonymity. The guards said the correctional officer was Russell Lorentz, 42, of Moundsville. He was be ing treated Sunday for an "anxiety reaction" and influenza at Reynolds Memorial Hospital and was in fair condition, officials said. Lorentz. was one of 16 hostages seized in the New Year's Day uprising by inmates brandishing r homemade knives and spears. Prisoners controll ed the decrepit. 120-year-old penitentiary for two days and killed three inmates before the last hostages were released Friday and the state regained control. Gov. Arch Moore has said officials believe a group of Inmates acted as “judge, jury and execu tioner" of prisoners suspected of informing on others. Although Corrections Department policy prohibits officers from speaking to reporters, several who agreed to speak without being iden tified said that hostages witnessed the deaths of ° Site and fellow inmate jeff Atkinson, who was convicted of murdering a pregnant woman. Atkinson's murder was seen by a guard who “had tilted his head back so he could peer out from behind a blindfold," one correctional pfflcer said. He said the inmates apparently cut out Atkinson's heart Tutu speaks in United States HARTFORD, Conn. (AP) — Bishop Des mond Tutu, ort the first stop of a three-week topf in the United States, said Sunday that the. • - South African government has' lost its fight to maintain a racially segregated nation: . • "You already have lost,'" the 1984' Nobel . Peace Prize winner.said.'addressing the South " African government. ' • An . outspoken critic of apartheid. .Tutu „ • spoke during a two-hour service at the Horace... Bushnell Congregational Church.-The inner’ ” ° city, church had -invited, bint to speak. ‘ . ;• • . • • _• • O , Dressed In a bright, purple robeand wear ing a large silver truss. Tutu said, '.'The God . we worship is a God who take# aides. ; . r , “Our God doesn't sit on a fence.," he said. ' ‘‘Our God cares that people are being tortured' in solitary cells, he cares that children are be' ing killed in the streets ’ . ’; • , . "The hatred; the anger, the injustice - hey. things are being changed to goodness. „• caring, laughter, joy and peace," ' • Tutu will be raising.funds during the tour: • for his Southern African Refugee-.Scholarship.. Fund an°d the Bishop Tutu Refugee Fund. . Pair who wore sweat suits r win tiWsuit against airline los an(;ki.ks (af) — a. coil pit? forced' off; a Europe bound.- airliner because .they were .wearihg jogging suitshave ; won their' small claims suit .-against World .Airways’- . Donald and. Magdalena Col gan of Oxnard. 60 miles west of downtown. - boarded a World Airways jet. in Los Angeles' last " June for- their .first- trip to. . Europe. Put they only got as far as Baltimore-Washiiigton. Inter national Airport. ” Although their gray his-and hers • jogging suits were ap parently acceptable in Los Angeles, an airline official ..in ■Baltimore found them too. • casual.' The couple bought the half price tickets from a friend through a World Airways pro gram offering discounts to friends and relatives of . employees. The airline said a brochure accompanying the dis count tickets said dressy attire was required of such ticket holders. "Nobody mentioned that to us when w« boarded in L.A.," said Colgan, 37. "If they had, we would have come back next day or changed our clothes there or whatever... We I » I—l r—t . __ wanted to be comfortable,”. •, But*they couldn't ge{.JU>'ttHh r clothes during the .Baltimore stopover; anil the plane and the Colgan*". 'luggage went.On- to » Frankfurt. West Germany.;- .The Cojgens "returned "home oh arfothor airline. The airline Is appealing the ■$1.(HH) .judgment the (Rigans won. last month" in .small claims court. . v •*. ; The Colgans said, in their to • months-of planning for the trip . — . visas.’ passports- and" a .$15,000 loan to buy a.car fn . Europe' -—, two .“nice, clean” jogging suits were the last thing :they"expected would interfere 0 "”We told the. judge there's.no way we would have consciously flaunted--a—dmsir;cOde-v-'said Colgan; a safety engineer for-sn insurance "company.- ”I‘ think the main point is that they-let us on the" plane" in Id* •Angeles without saying anything? “The fact that .somebody would do something like; that, knowing all the planning — you don’t go from California to Europe on a whim — to have :• somebody upset all those plans on a capricious whim, really irked me,” Colgan said. 1 <37C7<3M37<C7C7<3M37 ' vy ^ V_7 ^ ^ University Neighborhood Dentist Gentle care for students fof 14 years 0 0 0 Student Discount Available 0 J. Scott Baxter, d.m d., p.c. ^ 0 680 E. 18th Ave., Eugene _ ___-(] (corner of 16th & Hilyard) 344“637 in Monday, lanuary 6, 188»