World beat International Troops withdraw TEGUCIGALPA, Honduras (AP) — Remnants of a Nicaraguan force that crossed into Honduras began withdraw ing Tuesday, a source at the Honduran armed forces high command said. There were no reports of further fighting. The source identified the villages as Matingale, Las Mieles, Bella Vista and la Esperanza. About 2,500 Nicaraguan soldiers had entered the border area in incursions on Thursday and Saturday, the source said, triggering heavy fighting with Honduran troops. Truce scheduled MANILA, Philippines (AP) — The government and rebels resolved a dispute over weapons Thursday, removing the last obstacle to a truce in the Communist insurgency that has plagued the archipelago since 1969. Spokesmen for President Cor azon Aquino and the rebel Na tional Democratic Front said the 60-dav cease-fire would begin at noon today (11 p.m. Tuesday EST) as scheduled. Both sides said the agreement provides that armed guerrillas will not enter “population centers” and soldiers will not confiscate rebel weapons dur ing security patrols. National Building explodes BOSTON (AP) — An explo sion and fire struck a 40-story office building in downtown Boston on Tuesday, injuring five people and forcing hun dreds of workers to evacuate the smoky skyscraper, police said. An unknown number of peo ple were trapped in elevators and on upper floors when the 5:40 p.m. blast in the basement of One Post Office Square knocked out power, said police Sgt. Thomas Kelley. Greg Alex ander. the building's property manager, said all but two peo ple were rescued from stuck elevators. Shuttle booster tested BRIGHAM CITY. Utah (AP) — Morton Thiokol on Tuesday test-fired a section of its redesigned space shuttle booster, measuring the strain of launch conditions on new rocket joint configurations. O ring materials and insulation. The two-and-a-half-minute test was the third in a series of 10. but the last will be schedul ed under conditions simulating those that existed on |an 28 when the space shuttle Challenger exploded shortly after launch, company officials said. Allan McDonald, engineer in-charge of the booster redesign team, said then* was no indication of gas leakage, unlike the last two tests which used the same or only slightly modified configurations of the Challenger booster joints. Fumes leak at plant AIKEN. S.C. (AH) — Fumes from a fire-extinguishing system leaked Tuesday during a test at a federal plant that manufactures plutonium for nuclear weapons, injuring four employees and forcing about 2.1MH) workers to evacuate tem porarily, authorities said. No radiation was involved in the 10:50 a m. accident at the Savannah River Plant, said C.arl Nandrasy of the U.S. Depart ment of Energy, which owns the plant. Halon gas. which is used to smother fires, escaped and was inhaled by four workers, forcing the hour-long evacuation at the plant. Nandrasy said. The facili ty is located on a 300-square mile site and is operated for the DOE by Du Pont. Regional Man breaks fast PORTLAND (AP) — A 38-year old Vietnam veteran broke a four-week fast on Tuesday after receiving a call from Texas billionaire H. Ross Perot, who promised a meeting about U.S. soldiers missing in action in Southeast Asia. ‘Insiders’ aided in theft EUGENE (AP) — People •’in side" the University assisted in the Oct. 26 theft of laboratory animals, the Animal Liberation Front claimed in a statement mailed this week to University officials and local news media. The letter, with a Eugene postmark, called the animal thefts "a mission of mercy" to free the animals "from lives of forced confinement in steel cages inside sterile laboratories." On Oct. 26, vandals entered labs in two science buildings on campus, destroyed laboratory equipment and stole rats, hamsters, cats and rabbits. "We now have people on the inside, not only here, but in other places as well. This is how we were able to gain unrestricted access to the buildings and labs We intend to use these individuals to our advantage, insofar as they are willing to cooperate with us. whenever the opportunity ex ists," the letter slates. MONSTER COOKIE CO. For your gift giving:^ • Special packaging and cannisters • Treats for the * I Holidays • Specialty cookies K 5th & Willamette 687 1064 We Deliver! A ■UO Bookstore. CASH FOR BOOKS Nebraska Book Co., Wholesale Book Buyers will be here FINALS WEEK DEC. 15th-19th TEXTBOOK BUYBACK EVERYDAY Now is the best time to sell your books back. Come in early for fast service. Your store since 1920 13th & Kincaid M F 7 30 5 30 SAT 10 00 4 00 M6 4331 • Is an M.B.A. degree right for you? • What are admission requirements for the M.B.A. program? • How much will it cost to get an M.B.A. degree? • Is an undergraduate business degree required? • May I attend part time? • What majors are available for study? Come get the facts about the University of Oregon M.B.A Program It will be an informal session for you to get information about the M.B.A. (Master of Business Administration) program and to meet students, alumni, and faculty members. It's a great chance to get help planning your future. Refreshments will be served. Presented by the Graduate School of Management. Thursday, December 11, 1986, 4:30 p.m. Chiles Business Center, Burlington Northern Room