IU CULTURAL FORUM PRESENTS AT THE EMU BALLROOM THURSDAY OCTOBER 10 DOORS OPEN AT 8, SHOW AT 8 TO TICKETS $10 U ol 0 Students. $12 Genera! Public, available at EMU Mam Desk face the Music. Record Garden. CD World PLASTIC HANGARS ■LECTRIC HANDMIXERS UO BOOKSTORE 13th & Kincaid 346-4331 M-F 7:30-6 Sat. 10:00 6 Don’t miss out on great savings — Clip coupons out of the Oregon Daily Emerald. L J Iran bans Germany again from book fairs in Tehran WORLD NICOSIA. Cyprus (AP) - Iran has again banned Carman publishers from attending in ternational txiok fairs in 1 ehran because Car many burred Iranian publishers over the con demnation of Salman Rushdie. Sabah Zanganeh, deputy minister of culture and Islamic guidance, made the announcement Miminy. Iran s om ( ial Islamic Republic News Agency said in a dispatch monitored in Nicosia After the late revolutionary leader Ayatollah Kuhollah Khomeini issued a death sentence against Rushdie for his book The Sntnnii: Versos, Iranian publishers were prohibited from the Frankfurt Hook fair in 1‘1B9 and l'tdo Iran reciprocated with a ban on German publishers This year Iranian publishers were invited bat k to the Frankfurt exhibition, to begin Oct H. but the invitations were withdrawn last week. Organizers said German publishers objected to the continued death threat against Ri_hdie, whose hook KhomeiniCalled blas phemous to Islam. Zanganeh blamed "Zionist pressures" on the Frankfurt exhibi tion. the news agency said. He said eight leading book publishers, in addition to a small group of other publishers, were to display their books at the Iranian pavilion in Frankfurt INTERNATIONAL BRIEFS Storm forces ferry to lay at anchor for 30 hours DUBLIN, Ireland (AP) — For anyone who's ever been stuck in a stalled train or a traffic Jam, consider the case of the 570 travelers atioard tile unhappy ferry Felicity, which docked Sunday evening at Ireland's Rosslare Harbor, A storm forced the ferry to lay at anchor off Ireland's coast since Saturday morning, turning a quick :t -hour trip from Fishguard, Wales — just 65 miles away — into 30 hours of waiting in pitching seas and gale-force winds. The Stena Sealink line and passengers said many of the people aboard whiled away the hours dancing to music pro vided bv the ship's musicians One weary passenger leaving the ship at Rosslare said: "It was a long haul. But after a while most people decided to sit buck and make the best of it." "We were treated well by Sealink There was plenty of food and drink, stacks of films to watch and music to dance bv for anyone who had enough energy." P.issenger Frank McCoy, however, called the trip "an un mitigated purgatory, cooped up with mad musicians, one armed bandits, dintxilica! food and the stench of vomit," ac cording to tiio Times of London. President Mobuto chooses leader despite threats KINSHASA, Zaire — President Mobutu Sese Seko and his opponents chose an opposition louder as prime) minister Sun day despite throats by government critir.s to kill the new min ister if Mobutu remained in power. Ktienne Tshisekedi, leader of the Union for Democracy and Social Progress, was selected to form the so-called govern ment of national crisis, unconfirmed French media reports said. The appointment, which was widely expected, remains to be approved by a national conference of political leaders that will convene on Tuesday, the reports said. It was not clear what role Mobutu would play in a new government or what powers Tshisekedi would have as prime minister Murlier. ulxiut 20 opponents of Mobutu forced their way into his marble palace and disrupted the nine hours of talks aimed at keeping this vast country from slipping further into chaos. The group told reporters that they would kill Tshisekedi, 5H. and other opposition leaders if they agreed to form a coa lition government with Mobutu remaining even us u figure head. The scene demonstrated Mobutu's loss of control since un paid soldiers mutinied a week ago, pillaging Kinshasa and other cities in this sprawling Central African country of :t0 million people. Bush's announcement surprises military 1 RANK1UR1 . Germany (AP) Thu American military in Europe seems to have boon surprised as much as anyone by President Hush's decision to reduce the U.S arsenal of nuclei ar weapons U S military officers contacted in Germany and Britain over the weekend said they still were awaiting word from Washington about specifics on how their missions would be affected by Bush's announcement Friday night. American military units reported they continued to operate as in the past, even as some intercontinental missiles and B 52 units in the United State's were taken off alert for the first time in decades Asked how U.S. military units in Europe will be affected by Bush's plans, Maj. Freda Brume, a spokeswoman for the U.S European Command headquarters in Stuttgart, said "I don’t have anything on this." She said the command had been operating normally seven days a week "and the topic of removing short-range nuclear missiles from Europe hasn't yet been mentioned."