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Show Page 2 - THE HERALD, Provo, Utah, Wednesday. May 22, 1985 TT WT7 w orld Roundu The latest in national and international news United from Press International JL 41W H Chinese Riot Smears Image - Chinese PEKING (UPI) cials vowed Tuesday punish" up to to offi- 2-- six-da- match. an- gry rampage by thousands of Chinese youths Sunday night for bringing "shame to the city and nation." "The riotous act smeared the as well as our country," the China Daily newspaper quoted Peking Vice Mayor Zhang Baifa as saying at a meeting of municipal leaders and officials Monday. "Those who took part in the riot must be severely punished," Zhang said. He said the riot, in which mobs of irate Chinese surged out of Workers' StaPeking's 80,000-sedium and attacked foreigners and passersby, was "barbaric." image of Peking public-securit- 35,000 Ethiopian refugees who flocked to famine relief camps in Sudan over the last year have headed home to plant crops, relief officials said Tuesday. But relief officials expressed fears that returning refugees may fall victim to false hopes and they warned that relief efforts operating with difficulty in Ethiopia might be unable to meet the increased demand for food. U.N. Secretary-Genera- l Javier NEW DELHI, India (UPI) Afghan President Babrak Karmal, propped up since 1979 by occupying Soviet troops, is being treated coolly by his Soviet masters and may be replaced, a Western diplomat - said Tuesday. "There is an upsurge in rumors that the Soviets may make changes - in the DRA (Democratic Republic "of Afghanistan) leadership," said the diplomat, who spoke on condition that she not be identified. The Soviets' "cool treatment" of the Afghan leader on two recent trips to Moscow has fueled "recurring rumors Babrak Karmal might be dumped," she said. She did not, however, give any reasons for Karmal's apparent fall from favor. A BEIRUT, Lebanon (UPI) bomb exploded a school in Christian east Beirut today, killing at least 30 people, injuring at least 90 and leaving victims buried in rubble scattered over a 100-ya- Pope Says Visit John At least 30 people were killed and 90 wounded by the car bomb that shook the busy Sin El Fil neighborhood in mostly Christian - Pope riot-marre- east Beirut during the lunchtime rush-houChristian Voice of Lebanon radio said. Several tall buildings were set ablaze by the blast the bloodiest car bombing in east Beirut for at least a year. People remained trapped under tons of rubble more than an hour after the blast and hospitals issued urgent appeals for blood donors. A witness said the blast came as classes were being dismissed from a school down the street. The explosion sent shock waves through as conceded that difficulties in obeying those teachings were costing the church support. ' "You have to go and say the essential things," the pontiff told reporters Tuesday night aboard the plane returning him to Rome at tour that took the end of an him to the Netherlands and Luxembourg and ended in Belgium. "There was controversy before my visit. It will probably continue," John Paul said of objections Irom liberal Dutch Catholics to what they consider overly rigid Vatican policies. s '&&')(') N L8 00 for $1 WHITE POTATOES Or! Hew GREEN ONIONS 10 Fresh, bunch CANTALOUPE Vine ripe, lb ,0 , BROCCOLI Tender, freth, lb. . 25 . CORN KING HAMS 111 00 lb. pr CuitoiMr limit 2 r nJwUftm Ii n tut n ,,,,, -- nmiMimt,mMr. rr India's Rajiv Gandhi, left, shakes hands with USSR leader Mikhail Gorbachev. Perez de Cuellar, meanwhile, said some projects to provide food to regions of Africa have been set eside because of inadequate contributions to the World Food Program. A statement issued by the Nairobi office of the U.N. High Commissioner for Refugees said up to 35,000 refugees, many on foot, have famine-stricke- n voluntarily left the Sudanese Kow-l- i camps of Hilat Hakuma, Wad and Fan. It quoted refugees as saying they were returning because they had famine and 5 mil- lion others are threatened. The first group of returnees, mostly men, left the Sudanese camps in April. Those leaving now included large numbers of women and children, the statement said. roueht-induce- d received reports of rain and wanted to plant crops. The refugees, faced with starvation in their homeland, fled to Sudan during the last year. Relief workers estimate that 7 million people in Sudan are threatened by famine, including the more than 1 million refugees who have flocked there from affected regions DINNER FRANKS Wilton, lb BACON Sliced, 99 2 o 1 SPARE RIBS 75 Country style, lb. TROUT I69 Fresh, lb CHEESE 1"i Colby, lb. SNACK BAR of Ethiopia, Chad, Uganda and Zaire. An estimated 300,000 Ethiopians starved to death, last year in thed- - 25 CONES Delicious - 25 75( HOT DOGS Dtluioui H0ACIES the neighborhood, shaking buildone and ings, toppling scattering dead and wounded for some 100 yards. Among the victims were schoolchildren aboard a bus when the estimated to contain about bomb went off, the 450 pounds of TNT radio report said. It said at least 10 buildings and 50 cars were damaged. 89' HIGH QUALITY PICKLES CASSETTE PITTFD nilVFC Get your message out on cassette. ..! iiimei, SOUND CONCEPTS 1 75 W. 300 S. Provo 375-73- 99 Vlasik, 46 oi DUPLICATION i! ulryn medium, fljuiv . PORkX & BEANS Von Camp's, 300 CATSUP 33 . . i S1 129 Heim, 32 oi COKE, SPRITE OR TAB Diet Or Regular n n aiki a rnLiVi 1 29 6 Pack Cans ? CHIP DIPS nuircy, o us j Hamhuraer and .... -- vy DOTATH Russell's, CHRISTENSEN. Editor Emeritus ID 12 SUBSCRIPTION DOLLS When you want your car lubricated fast and right, look for the Minit-Lub- e earn their certification stripes. And relax! 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Urban said if rulDC lay's, 16 oi ICE CREAM United Press International Audit Bureau ot C rcu'rition NEA Service newsmen would FULL-SERVIC- Vfitcl OHI.drtnl INCLUDES: E SUNGLASSES Glacier All Weather Volues to $6.99 YOUR CHOICE 99 TIMEX WATCHES chil US!2 CtwcK Wtd till Limited selection 50 The Universal Campus Credit Union will hove its Annual in the lower level of the Meeting May 23rd at 7 p.m. Credit Union Office. Voting for the Board of Directors will be conducted at the Credit Union on May 20, 21, and 22, during regular business hours and on the 23'dfrom 9:30 a.m. until 6.45 Suggested Retail Universa HAIR SPRAY Aqua Net. 12 oi. Reg. 99 $1.96 p.rr.. At the Annual Meeting the winners of In the election will be announced. oddition, officials and management o' the Credit Union will take some time to go over last year s operations and progress. PORTABLE GRILL 'Suntutim Cnfctmtir rnt fluid For home, boat, picnics lnlrtw canyon hove. your Annual Meeting. Member ownership is what really separates Credit Unions from every other type of financial organization ... and 'he Annual Meeting is your opportunity to make your voice heard. Mttend Ptovo. Utah B46U4 Phor.e 1BUI1 lil 7 WATS imt tor USAe.cept tor out ot to" ill BIBB t 800 453 1415 Uth 24 99 Look for the Stripes Orern 91 No. State St Provo 1575 No. 200 West 'fri price v.iIkJ at dhove locations only) (Sib members Save over 50 The Annual Meeting is good time for members to ask any questions they may Universal Campus Credit Union 1900 North canyon Mood WAISIirstlor Utoh t 800-66- Sunkljf, Pink LAVERL PO j barred from their trial. Government spokesman Jerzy Urban told a news conference Annual Meeting y Entered as second class matter at the post office m Provo Utah mericans demanding freedom r three jailed Solidarity activists, Union $ . Published Sunday through Friday by Scnppi league Newpaperi, Inc. 1555 North 200 West. Provo. Utah 84604 E B JENSEN Publisher - Campus Credit ! V js c2heat PoMay 22 tUPIi land rejected a protest letter lrom 28 Nobel laureates most of them The v. REAM'S BREAD BUNS Poland Rejects Winners' Protests d said western T r, d "indispensable" to his effort to promote basic Christian values, but WARSAW, -- Beirut Car Bomb Kills 30 car near at least area. CITY (UPI) ? ) f W(DNiSBAr-SAruDA- I w- 2000. EnNAIROBI, Kenya (UPI) couraged by reports of rain, some -- Paul II defended his visit to the Netherlands r'? 9 ilrJt ilQlY . Ethiopian Refugees Returning Home - Afghan Head VATICAN If Tass also said the two leaders agreed to a basic guideline for economic, trade, scientific and technical cooperation between India and the Soviet Union until the year 2000. The Indian leader also expressed fears that neighboring Pakistan is close to developing nuclear weapons. "We are extremely worried about the Pakistani nuclear program," he said. "We feel the United States could do more to stop them from developing nuclear weapons and they are not doing so." He said he discussed Afghanistan during his talks with Gorbachev. He said India has declared is opposition to any interference in the internal affairs of another country but he did not specifically mention the 1979 Soviet invasion of Afghanistan. Russ Very Cool Indispensable t y year Briefs To - Indian Prime Minister Rajiv UPI) Gandhi wrapped up two days of meetings with Soviet leader Mikhail Gorbachev today by telling a news conference he is looking forward to meeting President Reagan next month. At a news conference on the second day of his state visit, Gandhi also expressed lears that Pakistan is developing nuclear weaponry and that the United States is "turning a blind eye'' to the Pakistani nuclear program. Earlier in the day, Gandhi and Gorbachev signed a new agreement on economic and technical cooperation between the two nations, the official Soviet news agency Tass reported. The pact provides nearly $1.2 billion in trade credits to finance Soviet goods and services in India. The official Tass news agency said they also agreed to a basic guideline for bilateral economic, trade, scientific and technical cooperation until the MOSCOW "severely City officials condemned the I I FOOOl lOWIST Rajiv, Mikhail Sign Trade Pact soccer fans who were arrested for rioting following China's 1 soccer loss to Hong Kong in a World Cup qualifying 127 t UTAM E WOOD PUZZLES Children's "Wood Knob" Reg. $5.99 2i8'i. Wl ADD 0NIY 10 TO THESE PRICES 2 |