SPHNGflBDj SOENTTBC SUPPLES / (503) 726-9176 t «0a.M4 2047 "til « I l«^ !•*! w* ) Allergy and Asthma Research Group is Conducting a Clinical Research I rial Participants must fa* Male 1805 year* old ’ A non-smoker, non drug user Able to avoid alcohol during the »tudy Using one ol the following atthma inhaler* Kivvv* fc*JU oou Aimaeorl * , Vancerlt* , Beclovenls 6 puffs Aerobld* 4 puM* Participants receive f. xammallona, pulmonary function*, eleclrocardiogr am*, laboratory testing and study medication* at no charge Compensation for study participant* Call pur office to see it yop qualify Allergy and Asthma Research Group 1488 Oak Sired, Eugene. OR 97401 683-4324 Robert Frost Jones M D Kroig Warren Jacobson, H D the and let your creativity RUH *in.o Apply to b© a PROGRAM ASSISTANT! for the 1995-96 Academic Year Applications now available in the Housing Office! Attendance at one of the informational meetings is required. Final meeting: Tuesday, March 28th at 5:00pm (Carson Gold Room) *>*•" *% HouMng a cr* I <|uc*'^'**»*#*% A*rrro**» Action corurmml to ; iJKrcM L nod CornpAorc* ***» Atomic <.jr« wm-- DmXrfmm, Ac * Three killed in tribal dispute NATIONAL CATTARAUGUS INDI AN RESERVATION. N V IAP} — Nearly 1 ?»0 vears of tribal solidarity Against the outside world have unrav eled in a few months in a deadly power struggle among Seneca Indians Three Senecas died in a weekend gun Tight as a result of a feud between one faction pushing to expand the trilxtl « onomy and a srcond that feels the expansion would cultivate greed ami destroy traditional values “I do believe that we an* in a civil war,-’ said Karen Bucktooth, a faction leader "There is six h a split hi our people. I don't know if it's heatable " The Senm as' Cattaraugus reservation, 10 miles south of Buffalo, was quiet Sundav. a day after a shootout Imtwxwn sopjKirters of Bucktooth and those of Dennis Bowen, who both < laim to la- tribal pres ident Each side blames the other for the violence, which killed three But ktooth supjHJtlers The dispute has divided families no charges w ere filed but police said a suspect in the shootings is a son of one of the slain man "It would he a terrible thing if he had the blood of his father on his hands, if he pullet) the trigger," Erie County Sheriff Thomas Higgins said "But well probably never know who did it Six months ago, the 11,500-member Seneca Nation seemed poised for an « minimi boom after two cen turies of quarrels w ith New York state s govern manta ovw land. taxes and other issues They were reaping investment profits from a $(>o million windfall paid by the state and federal gov ernments in a sell lenient of tribal land claims Some tribal leaders also had sought to establish a gambling tasino, though the Senecas voted that down in a referendum last summer. Tlie tribe set up a St million loan fund to encour age new business and was s»«eking outside investors Some members of the tribe felt such enterprises were eroding their culture and that the profits were going into the poilets of a handful of tribal leaders and their non-Indian attorneys t hose traditionalists have heaped much of the blame on former New York Democratic chairman Joseph (Irangle. a tribal attorney, i laiming he <>ngi neered a politic al machine among the Senet is slm ilar to one he once ran statewide. "I'm not a pnlitiial operative then1. I'm a lawyer." (Irangle said, "it's the oldest tric k in the world for the Indians that, to deflect criticism against them selves. they go pick on a white guy." Hut Marcheta Birch, an Indian affairs expert at Canisius (Inllege in Buffalo, said setting up a polit ical machine was pns isely what tribal leaders did, i omplete with cronyism. The problems date from 1H4H. when the Senes .as broke away from the traditional Iroquois Indian sy-, tern of clan mothers and tribal chiefs and estab lished an elected government. Birch said Since then there has (teen a growing discrepan cy between the tribe’s haves and have-nots, she said Wilson at odds with conservatives WASHINGTON (AP) (.ill fomia C.ov IV!.' Wilson has little diom o to become the Republi can nominee for president because of his support for abor tion rights, two Republican con servatives said Sunday "In the Republican party today, if vou are pro-abortion rights, you're probably not going to get the nomination,' House Major! tv leader Du k Armey R-Texas. said '! don't think it will ploy very well," Armey, speaking on NBC's Sit-el the Press. said when asked alKHit Wilson's position on ubor Hon, bis support for some gun control and lies past record of raising faxes in California. "I respectfully disagree with Hit k. Wilson said later on AIR "s This Week with David BrinkJex He Mid most members of the Republit on Parly who opposn abortion are driven by morn than that single issue Wilson announced formation last week of a committee to explore Ins < hom es in the ra