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About Oregon daily emerald. (Eugene, Or.) 1920-2012 | View Entire Issue (July 23, 1998)
## Musique Gourmet Catering to the Discriminating Collector CRITICALLY ACCLAIMED CLASSICAL MUSIC, OPERA, BROADWAY, FILM SCORES & TALKING BOOKS ON COMPACT DISC CD’S FROM $3.95 In the Fifthpearl Building 207 E. 5th Avenue OPEN 7 DAYS Free Parking 343-9000 LIVE MUSIC No cover charge EVER! 0038051 7/24 Roy Swanson 7/25 John Barley S ACOUSTIC ANARCHY S 4 ALL SHOWS START AT 9:30 P.M. Open mic Sundays w/ Pete Christie, 8:00 pm Check out our beer of the night. Microbrews/Domestics on tap. Monday Night Pool Tourney • Sign Up 6:30, starts 7:00 Free Poa. Sunday iNoon- 530PM1 & Tuesday Evening 17 00 - io oopmi 2657 Willamette • 344-0816 Including Labotts, Foster's and a large selection of other imports and micros I Any 16” i Two Item Pizza | Plus Two (2) FREE 21 oz. Soft Drinks I ONLY iMi arnelton St. ♦ 6 National Briefs N. Carolina searchers find suspect’s camps 1 ANDREWS, N.C. — Searchers have located several areas they believe abortion clinic bombing suspect Eric Rudolph used as campsites. “At one of those sites, we found trash buried in the ground, and Eric Rudolph’s fingerprint was identified on one of the pieces of trash,” Woody Enderson, inspec tor in the Southeast Bomb Task Force, said Wednesday. The campsites were found east of Andrews, where more than 200 law enforcement officers have searched intensively for nearly two weeks. Rudolph is accused of bombing a Birmingham, Ala., abortion clin ic Jan. 29, killing an off-duty po liceman and severely injuring a nurse. He also is wanted for ques tioning in three Atlanta bombings, including the 1996 Olympics blast that killed one person and injured more than 100. GM strike may delay ’99 pickup trucks 2 DETROIT — The number of workers idled by the strikes against General Motors Corp. sur passed 200,000 on Wednesday, as GM and United Auto Workers lawyers met with an arbitrator to argue whether the walkouts were legal. The automaker said that in ad dition to the 9,200 strikers, about 192,800 employees at 27 assem bly plants and more than 100 parts plants across North Ameri ca have been affected by the strikes at two parts plants. The total swelled as the au tomaker idled its Pontiac East truck plant near Detroit, sending 3,400 workers home. The plant had only recently begun pilot production of GM’s new genera tion of full-size pickups. The latest shutdowns were a major blow to GM’s determined efforts to keep the launch of the ’99 pickups on schedule for fall. Report ranks states’ toxic accident risk 3S AN FRANCISCO—A new re port analyzing the risk of toxic accidents across the country shows that more than 41 million Americans live near companies using chemicals that could cause serious injury or death. The report by the Boston-based nonprofit National Environmen tal Law Center and the Washing ton, D.C.-based U.S. Public Inter est Research Group ranked states and counties for their accident po tential based on factors including the number of industrial facilities in the areas. Among states, Texas led the na tion for risk of chemical accidents, with Ohio, Louisiana, California, Illinois, Pennsylvania, New York, North Carolina, Michigan and Georgia rounding out the top ten. Majorcities most at risk include Houston, Los Angeles, Chicago, Baton Rouge, La., Cleveland and Charleston, S.C. w Learn How To Save A Life American Red Crow training in Rrat AM and Adult CPU $15 Fee Includes 4 Hour Class • Instruction Booklet • Certificate of Instruction July_ 27 Mon 4:00-8:00 First Aid August__ 6 Thurs 4:00-8:00 First Aid 003883 • Health Center Cafeteria • $15.00 • Current CPR card needed for American Red Cross First Aid Class Register Early 346- 2770 f Sponsored by the Health Center Health Education Program Campus Briefs Frohnmayer gets salary Increase The state Board of Higher Education gave final ap proval June 16 to salary rais es for university presidents — the first raises in two years. University President Dave Frohnmayer’s annual salary, along with the presi dential salaries of Oregon State University and Port land State University, will rise from $130,000 to about $138,000. The 6-percent raise is in tended to bring Oregon’s salaries closer in line with the presidential salaries of comparable schools in other states, said Philip Brans ford, assistant director of communications for the Oregon University System. Presidents of the four smaller schools also re ceived 6-percent raises, lift ing their salaries from $104,000 to about $110,000. The Oregon Daily Emerald is published daily Monday through Friday during the school year and Tuesday and Thursday during (he summer dy the Oregon Daily Emer ald Publishing Co. Inc., at the University of Oregon, Eu gene, Oregon. A member of the Associated Press, the Emerald operates independently of the University with offices m Suite 300 of the Erb Memorial Union. The Emerald is private property. The unlawful removal or use of papers is prosecutable by law. NEWSROOM — S4l.^6.SSll Editor in chief: Michael Hines Associate Editors: Rob Moseley, Leanne Nelms Photo Editor: Laura Goss Webmaster: Broc Nelson Reporters: Peter Breaden, Amy Goldhammer ADVERTISING - S41.S46-S712 Becky Merchant, director. Rachelle Bowden, Leigh-Ann Cyboron, Dan Hageman, Doug Hentges, Andy lakefish, Erick Schiess, Ryan von Klein, Emily Wallace CLASSIFIEDS — S4H46-4W Anne Nielsen, manager. BUSINESS — S41.S46-SS12 General Manager Judy Riedl Business: Kathy Carbone, business supervi sor. Melanie Jones, receptionist. Distribution: John Long, Peter Breaden PRODUCTION — S41.M6-4S81 Michele Ross, manager. Tara Sloan, coordina tor. Laura Daniel OREGON DAILY Emerald