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About Oregon daily emerald. (Eugene, Or.) 1920-2012 | View Entire Issue (July 13, 1989)
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A « ampuv • <r 7f>.’ f llth Avv >4 1 FOLKWAYS IMPORTS World View_ International French town terrorized HKSA NCOS' Prance (A I’) A farmer fired a mm from his < ar while driving through a village on VYednesdav and killed 15 of the town's 100 people. m< hiding Ins mother and sister, authori ties said Polic e i aptured the man. identified as (Christian Dormer, after the attack in the village of I.uxiol He was among 10 people injured, including his father and a police c aptain, police said Ceorges Dormer, the man's uncle, said in a tel ephone interview that his nephew was "mildly depressive I saw him this morning and he was very c aim I’olicc in the regional headquarters in Hesan con. about 25 miles from I.uxiol. gave no cause for the attac k I.uxiol is about 275 miles southeast of Paris A neighbor of Dormer, Marie Therese Harraud. said she hid behind a wall as he fired shots into her kite hen "My husband, who was outside, was shot in the legs and the head He's in the hospi tal." she said by telephone "I knew he was sick, he had shot at my hus band one e before." Harraud said of Dormer "Our neighbors advised us not to go out in our gar den Mandela responds lOHANNKSBURC. South Afrit h (AP) Nelson Mandela, the imprisoned African National Con gress leader, said Wednesday his release is "not an issue" and he wants only to promote peace in South Afrit <i His comments came in .1 statement issued by the Prisons Service in response to international interest in his -ft minute meeting last week with President P \V Botha It is the first Mandela state ment the government has approved for public re lease since l*IHr>. although lie has sent messages out through Ins lawyer and other visitors Mandela said Justice Minister kohie Coet see's statement Saturday aliout the July r> meeting with Botha at the president's residence in Cape Tow n was accurate " The statement, however, constitutes no devia tion from the position I have taken over the past lift years, namely "Dialogue with the mass democratic move ment. and in particular with the Afric an National Congress, is the only way of ending violenc e- and bringing peace to our country." said Mandela's statement "I would also like to confirm that my release is not an issue at this stage-.' Mandela said "I only would like to contribute to the creation of the c li mate whic h would promote peace in South Afri ca." Mandela, whom many of South Africa's 2H mil lion blac ks 1 (insider their leader, has been impris oned sine e 1 'MiJ on a life sentence for plotting to overthrow the white government Castro lauds anti-drug efforts MKXICO CITY (AP) — Cuba started a drug probe in Marc h after the United States arrested two traffic kers w ho said they used the island na tion as a base. President Fidel Castro was quoted Wednesday as saving The investigation led to the arrest of war hero Maj Cen Arnaldo Ochoa and Ft other army and Interior Ministry officers In an address to the Cuban Council of State, Castro said the death sentences given Ochoa and three others were a "hitter decision." but said he* also thought about "others who have died "I think of those who fell to build a decent so ciety to create a republic where justice ruled, where there was no corruption, dishonesty, em bezzlement fraud or treason." Castro said in the speech Sunday He spoke shortly before the count ii rejected an appeal by ()< hoa Castro is chairman of the coun cil. which is made up of high government and Communist Party officials and is Cuba's last court of appeal A videotape of the five hour address was broad cast on Cuban state television Tuesday night; the text was transmitted Wednesday by the govern merit news agency Prensa Latina. Castro said Cuba was tipped off by "some of our Colombian friends” whom he did not name about drug trafficking from Cuba He said the co incidence between the ICS charges and the Co lombian information caused him to order an in vestigation in Man h Hut Castro attacked the United States for trying to score propaganda points on the drug traffick ing issue National NASA official resigns WASHINGTON (AH) NASA, preparing to celebrate the 20th anniversary of its greatest achievement, lost another top official Wednesday because of an ethics law that takes effect next week. Robert () Alter, head of the Office of Space Op erations. was the ninth high-level official to re sign this year and the third to say publicly he is leaving because of the law. "Frankly, it's so vague and undefined that I'm not aware of anybody in government or on Capi tol Hill or m industry that really understands its implications," Aller said. "For one that had planned at some point in time to go into private industry, it almost insists that you resign before the Kith of July." The law. aimed at curtailing the "revolving door” personnel relationship between some fed eral agencies and private industry, goes into ef fect Sunday It has been postponed once The rules will bar federal contractors from hir ing government officials who have supervised their competitors' projects. Aller joined the National Aeronautics and Space Administration in and was deeply in volved in the Apollo moon program, which cul minated July 20. 1960. in man's first footfall on another heavenly body. B-2 bomber hanging WASHINGTON (AP) Air Force officials fak ing their case for the Stealth bomber to the House were met Wednesday with stiff resistance from budget-conscious lawmakers and a warning that the half-billion-dollar aircraft could become a museum piece." "Seven to eight billion dollars a year on one weapons system is twice as much as we're spend ing on Star Wars. I just can't sell that." Rep. I.es Aspin. D-VVis.. chairman of the House Armed Services Committee, told Air Force officials argu ing for the second straight day on Capitol Mill for the H-2 bomber Air Force Secretary Donald Rice and Chief of Staff Larry Welch said tfi.it the radar-evading bomber outpaces improvements in Soviet air de fense The officials also reminded lawmakers that the government has already invested about $2.1 bil lion in the plane NEXT TO CAMPUS Call ahead and pick up your order at our drive-up window or visit us inside the restaurant DAILY LUNCH BUFFET NIGHT BUFFET (Mon-Tues) (& Sun) 730 East Broadway • 485-0576 (SPRINGFIELD | SCIENTIFIC 1 SUPPLY | Hours: | Mon.-Sat. " 10am-6pm I 726-9176 ■ 1124 Main St. * Springfield iiiiaiiiiBiiiaiiiiBiiuBiimiiiBiiiwni Axeman Baseball Card Show Sat. July 1 5th 9:30-4:00 South Eugene High School cafeteria Admission $ 1.00 406 E. 19th