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Show P84Thurcdayt May 22, 1980 1 The Newpapr M. .iMHMi,1l III lilll INTERNATIONAL KCjJ m. i, x ' DO A TAKEOUT our complete menu is available for takeout Lunch 11:30 to 2:30 Dinner 5:00 to 10:00 Sunday Lunch 12:00 to 4:00 430 Gain Stroot 648-0813 PROSPECTOR SQUARI ATHLETIC CLU3 lit. ... TI'IM ' -(i'lfl fW 01 ')' JUNE CLASS SCHEDULE June 2 June 26 (4 week session) CLASS FEES Member $10 Family Members $20 for 2 or more classes Single Members $15 for 2 or more classes Non-members $35 per class ADULT CLASSES MONDAY & WEDNESDAY 9-1 0 a.m., Yoga, Beginning ( & Fridays also), Instructor Bonnie Van Schenk 11-12 p.m. Swimnastics (& Fridays), Instructor JeannineCarofanello 6-7:30 Dance Aerobics, Instructor Val Cowan TUESDAY & THURSDAY 9- 1 0 a.m. Dance Aerobics, Instructor Val Cowan 10- 1 1 a.m. Intermediate Tennis, Instructor Ronn Cooper 11- 12 p.m. Beginning Intermediate Tennis, Instructor Ronn Cooper 5- 6 p.m. Intermediate Tennis, Instructor Ronn Cooper 6- 7 p.m. Beginning Intermediate Tennis, Instructor Ronn Cooper 6-7:30 p.m. Yoga, Beginning (Thursday Only), Instructor Bonnie Van Schenk, $35 7:45-9:15 p.m. Intermediate Yoga (Thursday Only), $35, Instructor Bonnie Van Schenk CHILDREN CLASSES MONDAY & WEDNESDAY 8- 9 a.m. Swim Team (Friday also), Instructor Susan Burdick 9- 10 a.m. Beginning Swimming, Instructor Susan Burdick 10- 1 1 a.m. Beginning Swimming II, Instructor Susan Burdick TUESDAY & THURSDAY 8- 9 a.m. Intermediate Swimming and Stroke development, Instructor Susan Burdick 9- 10 a.m. Beginning Tennis, Instructor Ronn Cooper 2- 3 p.m. Beginning Gymnastics (4-6 yrs.), Instructor Cathie Corrie 3- 4 p.m. Beginning Gymnastics (7-up), Instructor Cathie Corrie 4-5:30 p.m. Advanced Gymnastics (all ages), Instructor Cathie Corrie SPECIAL "SUMMER" ONLY MEMBERSHIP OFFER INITIATION FEE $100 dIus dues ' Single .V ...!.. $45 full facility Couple .A.... $50 full facility Family A. .. $55 full facility JUNE 1 DEC. 1 only. Then initiation maybe applied to joining. 1 Naples, Italy In hopes of speeding the release of the American hostages, foreign ministers of the Common Market agreed Sunday to impose economic sanctions against Iran. The sanctions will affect industrial, service and trade agreements made with Iran after the Nov. 4 takeover of the U.S. Embassy in Tehran, but will not change billions of dollars worth of contracts made before that time. Exempt from the sanctions will be the sale and service of food and medicine. The ministers also gave their support to U.S. Secretary-General Kurt Waldheim's plan to return to Iran Ayib Baoudy, a representative of the special U.S. commission sent to Tehran in March. The commission left Iran when its members mem-bers were not allowed entrance into the embassy to see the hostages. Critics of the Common Market's sanctions claim it is an empty gesture, since it falls short of the group's commitment a month ago to conform to the Security Council's sanction resolution of Jan. 10. Italian Foreign Minister Emilio Colombo, Colom-bo, who presided over the one-day Euromart meeting, flatly denied the sanctions are meaningless, since reportedly virtually no contracts con-tracts have been signed with Iran since Nov. 4. Italian officials later said a large number of contracts con-tracts under negotiation since that time would be suspended. On Tuesday, Japan announced limited sanctions san-ctions against Iran, basically following the approach ap-proach set forth by the Common Market. Japan however, will continue negotiations with Iran on oil imports, and will resume construction on the $3 billion Bandar Khomeini petrochemical plant in southern Iran. The embargo against Iran will go into effect Thursday, but officials have placed no dollar amount of the economic impact the sanctions will have. Tehran Iran's first Islamic parliament is scheduled to convene May 29 to discuss terms for the release of the American hostages. The deputies are expected to spend most of the month outlining parliamentary procedure, electing a speaker and approving a new government before they turn to the hostage problem, however. Political unrest caused the postponement of elections before 28 Parliamentary seats were filled, but the' Islamic Republican Party and its allies are expected to dominate the assembly. The IRP, composed of fundamentalist Islamic clerics and lay persons, favor putting the American hostages on trial for alleged espionage unless the shah is returned to Iran. The IRP already has won more than 130 of the 270 seats. Meanwhile, a hardline Islamic group close to the IRP warned Iranians last week that a U.S.-backed U.S.-backed coup possibly is being staged in Khomeini's name in the defense of Islam. President Abolhasan Bani-Sadr added fire to that announcement when last week he said the United States is attempting to undermine the Iranian government by provoking a coup. But Revolutionary leader Ayatollah Ruhollah Khomeini said a coup was unthinkable and a mere rumor. "You can't make a coup with a tiny number of opponents," Khomeini said. "I assure you that this nation is indestructible." The 53 American hostages, now in their 200th day of captivity, are said to be dispersed in 13 cities throughout Iran to prevent a second rescue attempt. Katmandu, Nepal Two Polish engineers became the first men to reach the summit of 29,028-foot Mt. Everest from the previously un-conquered un-conquered "South Pillar" Monday. The Nepal Ministry of Tourism praised the bravery of the pain, noting the south route is treacherous and nearly vertical. The climbers were identified as Andrezej Czok, 32, an engineer from Gliwice, and Jerzy Kukuczka, 32, a mechanical engineer from Katowice. Despite running out of oxygen and running into deep snow during the assault, the pair make it to the summit, where they reported the weather to be clear but windy. The climbers stayed on the summit for 50 minutes, during which time they planted the flags of Nepal and Poland, before returning to their 10,000-foot base camp. Seoul, South Korea An estimated 30,000 South Korean students blocked the streets of Seoul last week in the largest anti-government demonstration demon-stration in years. Scores of students were reported injured in clashes with riot police, who were attempting to break up the crowd with tear gas. Unrest among the students has been building for two days before the riots broke out. The students are demanding that the government lift the martial law authority the Korean military forces have been operating under since President Park Hung Hee was assasinated last October. In addition, they asked that a timetable be outlined for the amendment of the constitution, that a new presidential election be held, and that two prominent officials be ousted. The Cabinet met twice last week under the direction of Prime Minister Shin Hyon-Hwach, who is acting lea'ioi during the absence of interim President Choi Kyu Hah, who is traveling in the Middle East. NATIONAL Vancouver, Wash. Six people are known dead after volatile Mt. Saint Helens erupted Sunday, ripping off the top 1,300 feet of the peak and shooting hot ash thousands of feet into the air, blotting out the sun in cities over 100 miles away. Rivers of steaming mud swept down the mountainside, moun-tainside, causing the evacuation of nearly 3,000 residents in tiny towns up to 30 miles away from the volcano. Mt. Saint Helens first gave signs of activity March 27 after being dormant for the past 120 years. The blast from the eruption, which began at 8:39 a.m. PDT, was felt in parts of Canada 200 miles away. U.S. Geological Survey experts said mud, pumice and ash roared into the valley of the North Fork of the Toutle River, creating a 20-foot high barrier at the outlet of Spirit Lake. Despite the mud damn, officials were concerned it would not hold back rising waters. Black clouds of choking ash caused automatic street lights to come on in parts of Idaho, and one Boise meteorologist predicted the fallout could reach as far as New England. Schools and businesses have been closed down in the path of the cloud, and police have been patrolling the streets sending messages on loud speakers from their cars warning residents to stay indoors. Despite Mt. Saint Helens fury, experts said the ash and dust sent into the atmosphere will not match the estimated 60 cubic miles of debris blown into the air from the eruption of Mount Tambora in Indonesia in 1815, the largest recorded recor-ded eruption in history. One expert said this eruption could cause brilliant sunrises and sunsets sun-sets from the dust particles in the air. He noted that while ash suspended at 50,000 feet or below likely would fall within a few days, debris in the upper atmosphers could stay aloft for more than a year. In the wake of the mud slides, inches of ash coated the slopes of the 9,677-foot peak and wafted waf-ted into the valley. Onlookers said "the devastation on the mountainside is incredible. Trees are knocked down. Animals are standing around in shock, covered with ash. ' ' On Tuesday, Mount St. Helens eontinued to belch ash and steam, and scientists said the display could go on for years. Miami Armed National Guardsmen patrolled ine noi-iorn streets oyvugnn Monuay nigni, $j,-Hfc te'r the acquittal of four white ex-policemen in the beating death of a black man touched off a racial uproar that left at least 16 people dead and 370 injured. Despite an 8 p.m. to 6 a.m. curfew imposed by Gov. Bob Graham, looting and arson went virtually vir-tually uncontrolled as crowds of enraged blacks shouted "McDuffie," in unison. The furor came after an all-white Tampa jury found four former Dade County policemen innocent in the death of black businessman Arthur McDuffie. McDuffie, 33, was caught on a Miami street Dec. 17 following a high-speed getaway attempt on his motorcycle. The ex-Marine died four days later of head injuries so critical that a medical examiner said his skull was "cracked like an egg." Police reported one man was shot, his ear cut off and his tongue severed. He was discovered with a red rose jammed in his throat. A Miami Herald reporter said she witnessed two white men being run over by a van to the cheers of the crowd, composed of many children. On the third pass, she said, one man's arm was ripped off. In Tampa, three of the six jurors were placed under armed guard after receiving telephoned death threats. U.S. attorneys are expected to present evidence eviden-ce to a federal grand jury to see if the four policemen should be charged with violating Mc-Duffie's Mc-Duffie's civil rights. On Tuesday, sporadic gunfire gun-fire kept National Guardsmen on the streets as black leaders warned violence could break out again unless the federal government takes action. ac-tion. Chicago A lawsuit to stop efforts by condemned condem-ned mass murder John Gacy Jr. to profit by his crimes by selling his story was filed last week by the father of one of Gacy's victims. A temporary restraining order issued by Circuit Cir-cuit Court Judge George A. Higgins will block for 10 days any sale by Gacy or his attorneys of material that might financially enrich him. A hearing is scheduled for the case May 27. Harold Piest, whose 16-year-old son Robert was one of Gacy's 33 victims, filed the case. The suit says the sale of book, movie or television rights would allow the condemned murderer to profit from the murder of the young boys and men, and as such would be "legally and morally unconscionable and unreasonable. ' ' Storm Lake, Iowa The prevailing conditions must have given the name to this town, because when it rains, it pours. After the 89-year-old liberal arts college announced an-nounced it was launching a 10-year drive to raise $54 million, an anonymous philanthropist started things off with a contribution of $18 million. Based on the college's enrollment of 1,300 students, the donation goes down in the books as one of the largest per capita in the history of American gift-giving, providing nearly $13,846 per student.' 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