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About Oregon daily emerald. (Eugene, Or.) 1920-2012 | View Entire Issue (May 9, 1989)
© & f IUP®»*> «* CiKr ^0 >Aufr Ifi rt>p KdQ 18 OPEN 24 HOURS Kinko's Copies • Binding • Laser Design 860 E. 13th 344-7894 They’ll Drive You Wild in Eugene. Multnomah kennel Club (ireyhound Rat ing — Satellite Betting at Country Squire Inn. Now you can catch all the racing excitement right in your own home town — live on closed-circuit TV. (ptUir* "f.'randtfand" V.fO tdmiwion lkmti'inir* "Turf (tub"U.00tdmivuon. fcUBNTRyl SOtltRJE { L |NN j 33100 Van l)u>n Hoad {ohurj: Road & 1-5. Kxit 1W 4X4-2000 _World View International Panamanians protest PANAMA CITY. Panama (AP) — Armed men in civilian clothes attacked thousands of protesters Monday. firin« auto matic rifles to break up an op position march against election fraud At least three people were wounded. About 15.000 people joined the march to protest raids hv Cen, Manuel Antonio Noriega's soldiers, who witnesses said seized thousands of vote tally sheets and prevented Sunday's presidential election from he ing tabulated Opponents said Noriega. Panama’s de facto ruler, or dered the raid on vote-counting centers because the returns would show his hand-picked presidential candidate losing to the U S backed opposition by a wide margin. "The government is confess ing that it lost the elections by seizing the tallies across the na tion." said Kicardo Arias Cal deron, the opposition's vice presidential candidate ll.S observers also said the election was fraudulent, and former President Jimmy (barter said Noriega was "stealing this election from his own people." Polls closed 5 p.m. Sunday, but not until ,) p in. Monday did the official Electoral Tribu nal say it had received votes to count. It did not release totals. Opposition presidential can didate Guillermo Endara and government candidate Carlos Duque both claimed victory and cited rival exit polls as proof. The new president is to take office Sept 1. The attack came as the two hour march was breaking up near the Electoral Tribunal. Endara and other opposition leaders had left when a car I rearing a large Duque poster drove into the crowd Demonstrators threw stones at the car and the men inside began firing in the air. People scattered, many flinging them selves to the ground. Judge fines papers LONDON (AH A judge on Monday fined three newspa pers $»;».TsOO eat h for contempt of court lor publishing material from a former intelligence agent's memoirs in violation of a court injunction. High Court judge Sir Andrew Morritt ruled that the newspa per* published excerpts from "Spycatchcr.” by retired s<>< ret service man Peter Wright, knowing that public atiori i mild prejudice the court case against the (took The government fought a 2'/,-year court Iwttle to sup press "Spycatcher.” arguing that Wright was bound to a life time vow of secrecy. It lost the case and the book is now legal ly available in Britain, but the slate pursued prosecution of The Independent, The Sunday Times and the now-defunct News on Sunday. Sunday Times editor Andrew Neil vowed to fight the ruling all the way to the European Court in Strasbourg, France. "It seems that now. to get a proper value put on freedom of the press, you have to go out side this country." he said. "There was not one word in this judgment today about the freedom of the press or about the importance of a newspaper publishing things that powerful people don't want published " Independent editor Andreas Whittam Smith said the ruling meant "that injunctions can now lie manipulated as a sort of blanket gag on the press." The editors said they were worried because the ruling meant an injunction obtained against one newspaper auto matically applied to other newspapers. National Ball memorials held NEW YORK fA!’) — About 1,0()() people crowded into <1 church Monday night to pay tribute to Lucille Ball in one of three memorial Masses sched uled across the nation at an hour when Americans "were used to being with Lucy." "This is really not a requiem Mass." the Kev. lames Kox told those gathered for the Roman Catholic Mass at St. Ignatius Ixiyola "It's a Mass of thanks giving. of gratitude for a life th.it was full and brought joy to millions." A memorial Mass was also held in Chicago, and another was scheduled in the Los An geles suburb of Santa Monica. All three Masses were set to Ire gin at H p m. local time The 77-year-old star of "I Love Lucy" died April 2t>. eight days after heart surgery. Broadcaster Diane Sawyer, invited to speak by Ball's fami ly, said in New York that Ball "united us in the redeeming act of laughter." "I can t remember a thing about tm real life compared to what I remember about the Ricardos 1 can remember where every stick of furniture was in their apartment." Saw yer said. Elizabeth Varanda, a 33-year old fan of Ball, said she was "crazy about Lucy." "I liked her so much I felt like I lost a personal friend," she said Fox said Ball's family "want ed to have an opportunity for Lu< die s fans to express their gratitude for Lu< > They want ed to do it with a spiritual con cept." 'Moonlighting' pulled LC)S ANGELES (API David Addison and Maddie Hayes lost their biggest case Monday as ABC pulled the plug on the sagging fortunes of their tongue-in-cheek detective se ries "Moonlighting.” The last original episode of the series, an instant hit when it made its debut four years ago. will lie telecast this Sun day. the network said in a state ment. The show made a star of Bruce Willis, who played the free-spirited David It was a major comeback for Cybill Shepherd as the straight-laced Maddie The bickering ro mance between the mis matched couple sparked sexual electricity. Producer-creator Cdenri Caron's witty dialogue and sometimes daring stories wooed the audience. In recent years, however, the show fell victim to creative dif ferences and production prob lems. it began as one of the brightest spots on Tuesday night, but this season was (lulled from the schedule and returned on Sunday nights It was the seventh lowest-rated show the Nielsen ratings last week “TV, by its very nature, is cyclical and it would be foolish to expect 'Moonlighting' to continue indefinitely." Willis said Monday. "When the show was at its height, it was very much like playing a brand new song that had never been played before,” he said. 1 Swamped with work? ri JSSSKKSgSSKHSSSSSSSSar Microcomputer Support Lab / Room 202 Computing Center <M F 9 am - 5 pm / 686 4402 Green at the gills in a sea of paperwork? With an Apple Macintosh there's no need to be bogged down with monstrous projects and papers. A Mac can transform your academic nightmares into the most polished presentations. And now owning a Mac doesn't cost you an arm and a leg. 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