Oregon daily emerald. (Eugene, Or.) 1920-2012, January 08, 1987, Page 14, Image 13

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Sandwich
Shoppe
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464 2565
2833 Willamette
686 149*
UO STUDENTS !i
I
TO UO STUDENTS:
Because the Oregon Daily Emerald * an
optional student fee we offer refunds to
students who have paid unwillingly lor
their newspaper subscription this term
!>
Students who do receive this re
fund are stating their intent not
to read the Emerald throughout
Winter term 1987
Through Tuesday January 15.
1987 we will be refunding $1 99 to
subscribers in room 500 of the
EMU Refunds will be given from 9
am to 5 pm
But remember: The small cost of
an Emerald subscription — 3.23C
per issue per day — buys 3 months
of news about your education,
your administration and your
weekend entertainment.
World beat
Internationa1
Victims evacuated
SAN JUAN, Puerto Rico (AP)
— Bomb threats Wednesday
forced evacuation of hundreds
of people from a hospital
treating hotel fire survivors and
an inn where officials of the
ruined Dupont Plaza Hotel had
set up a temporary office.
Seven sites in all were
threatened but no bombs were
found, and police said they
found no connection between
the threats and the hotel fire.
One building threatened was
the Department of justice,
which is coordinating the in
vestigation into the New Year's
Eve blaze that killed 96 people
and injured more than 140 at
the 22-story. 439-room Dupont
Plaza, a fire officially termed
arson.
justice Department workers
stayed put. but at the State
Medical Center, a few miles
from downtown San Juan, about
300 people were evacuated for
about three hours.
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National
House approves probe
WASHINGTON |AP) — The
House voted 416-2 Wednesday
to investigate the Iran-Contra
connection, with Democrat*
pledging a swift and fair pro
ceeding and some Republicans
warning that rampant partisan
ship could lead to "political
cannibalism ”
Sven as the House was
following the Senate’s lead in
chartering a select panel to
delve into all aspects of the
arms and money affair, several
sources said that Lt. Col Oliver
North, from his National Securi
ty Council office, had managed
cash and other funds to pay for
the expenses of Nicaraguan
rebels.
On Wednesday, the lustice
Department ordered an PHI in
vestigation into a break-in at the
offices here of a group opposed
to the Reagan administration's
Central America policy.
Diplomats sent
WASHINGTON (AP) - The
Reagan administration,
weighing a fresh diplomatic ap
proach to the war in Nicaragua,
sent its two top Latin American
specialists to Miami on
Wednesday for secret talks on a
new peace initiative backed by
Costa Rica and Guatemala.
Assistant Secretary of State
Elliott Abrams and special
presidential envoy Philip Habib
were holding the talks with
Rodrigo Madrigal Nieto, the
Costa Rican foreign minister,
who flew to Miami on Wednes
day morning. Nieto was seeking
U.S. support for new overtures
to Managua.
But a U.S. official who con
firmed the mission was skep
tical that the leftist Sandinista
government in Managua was
prepared to accept any formula
designed to promote democracy
in Nicaragua. "The Sandinistas
will have to be pressured if
there is to In* a solution." the of
ficial said.
Committee head ousted
WASHINGTON (Al'|
House Democrats voted narrow
ly Wednesday to oust Kep. Les
Aspin as chairman of the Armed
Services Committee, a defeat
caused by Aspin's support of
the Keagan administration on
the MX nuclear missile and aid
to the Nicaraguan Contra rebels.
However, no successor to
Aspin was elected, meaning he
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686-3702
could rally and win back the
chairmanship when the issue is
finally decided Jan. 20.
The Wisconsin Democrat was
voted out, 130-124, by a secret
ballot only two years after he
won the powerful post by
engineering the ouster of the
long-time chairman of the
panel.
Some likely contenders for
the spot include Keps. Marvin
Leath of Texas, Charles Bennett
of Florida. Patricia Schroeder of
Colorado, and Nicholas
Mavmules of Massachusetts.
Regional
PBS sought
EUGENE (AP) — Lane County
Commissioner Jerry Rust says
he wants to study the feasibility
of local governments installing
television translators to provide
Oregon Public Broadcasting
reception in the Eugene
Springfield area.
Rust said he will ask the
board of commissioners to
direct the county to investigate
whether it would be practical to
erect a network of translators
that would carry the signal from
Corvallis station KOAC-TV to
the Eugene area.
Currently, KOAC-TV is
available only to cable
subscribers. Rust said his pro
posal grew from recent protests
over Group W Cable's decision
to move KOAC from channel 7
to channel 27. That means the
station can be received only on
the newer cable-ready televi
sion sets or with the assistance
of a converter box.
Prison proposed
SALEM (AP) — Gov.-elect
Neil Goldschmidt on Wednes
day proposed a $54 million cor
rections and anti-crime program
that includes more than 1,600
new prison beds.
Goldschmidt said the plan is
part of the proposed 1087-80
state budget he'll submit to the
Oregon Legislature when it con
venes its 1087 session Monday.
Part of Goldschmidt's plan is
to add 760 beds to the Eastern
Oregon Correctional Institution
at Pendleton.
A new part of his program
would provide MOO new
minimum-security beds, many
of them to relieve crowding in
existing prisons.
Goldschmidt said some beds
likely will be in the Portland
area, where much of the state's
crime occurs because it's the
most populous region.
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