Tuesday, September 10, 1985 Page 2 Daily Nebraskan 3 ED Mi' . t. M A J w samcao T1 S Pi 11 P ostiDOnedi Bycott staged over AIDS student WASHINGTON (Reuter) - The Senate, following President Reagan's milder approach, voted Monday to post pone action on legislation that would impose economic sanctions on South Africa for its system of racial separation. The vote in the Republican-controlled Senate was 53 to 34. Democrats accused the Senate of abrogating its responsibility to make law on this controversial issue and promised they would try again later to force a Senate vote on the bill. Last week, Republican leaders pre dicted the bill would pass overwhelm ingly despite Reagan's strong opposi tion to sanctions against the white-ruled government. But facing certain political defeat, Reagan on Monday announced he would take unilateral action to impose limited sanctions and Republican leaders agreed to try and postpone action on the stronger, more restrictive bill. Among other things, Reagan an nounced a ban on U.S. computer sales to agencies that administer apartheid, curbs on exports of nuclear technology and a ban on new bank loans to the South African government that would not benefit all races. In addition, he said he would con sult with U.S. trading partners under the General Agreement on Tariffs and Trade about a ban on importing South African Krugerrand gold coins. Today's vote came on a motion to stop an obstructionist debate and pro ceed to a direct vote on the bill. Anti apartheid forces, led by Democrats, needed 60 votes to cut off debate but only won 53. In Johannesburg, South African President P. W. Botha and one of his leading black opponents, Bishop Des mond Tutu, both attacked Reagan's limited anti-aparthied sanctions but from opposite political sides. Botha said in a statement that the sanctions were regrettable and would reduce Washington's ability to influ ence events in Sothern Africa. Nobel Peace Prize-winner Tutu also criticized the sanctions, telling repor ters that the mildness of the measures would make the Pretoria government "quite happy." "He doesn't care two beans about black people in South Africa," Tutu said of Reagan. "I don't think he cares at all . . . ." In Moscow, the official Soviet news agency Tass said Reagan's sanctions were so full of loopholes they were meaningless. "The 'sanctions' announc ed by Washington . . . once again ex pose the Reagan Administration as an accomplice of the racist butchers," it declared. The Soviet Union supports the idea of comprehensive United Nation sanc tions against South Africa, but dis misses any lesser step as a meaningless ploy. Britain may end up virtually alone in opposing European Community sanc tions against South Africa after Rea gan's decision, diplomats said. Speak ing on the eve of foreign ministers' discussions here on a common stand toward Pretoria, they said the timing of Reagan s announcement appeared to embarrass the ministers. A decision to impose sanctions would have to be agreed upon, unanimously and Britain's agreement was therefore vital, they added. The sanctions are expected to have little impact on the domestic economy or on U.S. and other foreign corpora tions with business interests in South Africa, banking sources said Monday. However, if U.S. economic sanctions against South Africa prompt retaliatory action, Amercian industry would quickly discover how dependent it is on South African minerals to keep its production lines open, officials said. South Africa is the United States' biggest supplier of chromium needed to harden steel for aircraft and plat inum, used to refine gasoline. A recent Commerce Department study on South African mineral resources said a con tinued supply was vital to President Reagan's military buildup and U.S. industrial preparedness in the event of a national security crisis. NEW YOTS Thousands cf psrcr.is kept thdr ehilirrn from school Mcr.day in the New York fcoroO cl v-?cs t zcz3 a cr.:I d spring from AIDS attended cUsrcs. The chili's identity, s?x tr.J sched vcra l;r; t s. :cr:i, lut c.'Hclals said the F-;'l te tscn aUfr.i:r..i F.c.:cl3 Lt t:.z p.t hire: &r.d could net trar..::t the dizrzzd to ether sirr.is. In tr;o C-?cr.s schcel districts v.l.;.r3 Ir-zizi v ;ra czllzi, r.cre than 9.CCD stui:r.ts sicyed v;:y f.cn y. zl'.c scclj c.i t.3 f.r-t izy of the " A j.-d:3 refund to tz-.:2 m c:i;r zivz;:rz tl.3 AIDS child from tter.-:r3 clones ar.d set Th"r:j!:y 3 the d;.t3 f.r a f;ll hcrir.3 on the Shi'ite, Palestinian battio wages on nCir.UT, Lebanon Shi'ite tr.d Fd:cti:.:3 forces trilled around a rcfo-ce crap for the seventh d?y llcv.izy ir-cicrta lizzie leaders prc-scd dsn'.ar.ds for an end to militia, ar.arcry b th streets of West Fsiirdzn sources said ths Shi'ite r.ilitis, Ar.rJ, v.Uch they accused last x.zzk cf carryir.3 cut a reveres UHlr; cf '"-tir.irn civilians in the suhu:b cf lloret Ilrrik, Szr.izy t::m:i 2D rcl;:.t:; hc":cs in Use same i'dist:::t. In a dr;:Ic?-rr.t, 111:7 to fciicr.:: p:llll::J c:-.::;:a, Finance I .::.:'-!;- C "I2 Cl.rr.crn r:i rc-:;t:d r:: 7 t5 r:: ' 1 r-J have the nz:i. a U.S. reaffirms support Thai coup attempt crushed BANGKOK, Thailand (Reuter) Thai troops issued a "surrender or die" ultimatum and crushed a coup attempt masterminded by a dis-' gruntled former army colonel Monday after a 10-hour confrontation in which four people were killed. Among the dead were two Western journalists caught in a hail of gunfire in the center of Bangkok from tanks manned by rebels. Fifty-nine other people were wounded, authorities said. The dawn attempt, involving up to 500 rebels who comandeered 22 tanks, collapsed after the government issued a "surrender or die" ultima tum. Authorities said the two ring leaders, Col. Manoon Roopkhachorn and his brother, air force Squadron Leader Manas, have surrendered. Prime Minister Prem Tinsulanonda raced home from an official visit to Indonesia after the coup attempt. He went on television shortly after land ing in southern Thailand and said his first priority was to restore'national unity and clear up any misunder standings in the military. Prem survived an abortive takeover bid, dubbed The April Fools' Coup, led by Manoon in 1981. Monday's revolt, mainly affecting the area of Government House in the old quarter of Bangkok, caught Thais by surprise and many were unaware the attempt had taken place. The United States said Monday it regretted the attempt by rebel soldi ers to stage the coup and reaffirmed its strong support for Tinsulanonda's government. State Department spokesman Ber nard Kalb told reporters, "The U.S. strongly supports the legally consti tuted government of Prime Minister Prem and is pleased by reports that the royal family is safe," he said. Among the four dead were Austral ian television journalist Neil Davis, who covered wars, coups and revolu tions, death and mayhem for 21 years. Monday he filmed his own death. Davis, 51, of NBC News, and his soundman, William Latch, were film ing rebel tanks moving on an army radio braodcasting building in Bang kok when they were both hit by fire from the tanks. Australian Gary Burns, a Visnews cameramen, related the incident in an interview: "Everything happened in a flash. We were on a direct line of fire and I think I saw the machine guns on four or five tanks fire directly at the broadcasting building before we all hit the dirt." Burns said Davis, still filming, rolled on top of hint and said, "I'm all right, I'm all right." "During a lull in the shooting I rolled him over to help him up but . . . he was dead," Burns said. "He died filming his own death." NewsmsTkors A roundup of the day's happenings House majority leader Jim Wright, D-Texas, on Monday accused the Reagan administration of contribut ing to air safety problems by slashing the number of federal aircraft inspectors by 25 percent since 1981 and for refusing to spend $3 billion in available funds for Doppler advanced radar equipment. Democratic Mayor Edward Koch, 60, a symbol for millions worldwide of what's right and what's wrong in New York City, is expected to easily win renomination for a third term in today's Democratic mayoral primary. Win ning the nomination is often tantamount to winning an election in NYC. where Republicans are considered an endangered species. From Paul Newman, at 60 the youngest, to Cary Grant and Isaac Bashevis Singer, both 81, McCall's maga zine has announced its picks for the 10 sexiest American men who are age 60 or older. President Reagan, 74, made the list, as did Frank Sinatra, 69; Joe DiMaggio, 70; John Huston, 79; Norman Mailer, 62; John Forsythe, 67, and Lee Iacocca, 61. "There's enough accumulated explosive force radiating from Grant, Newman, Singer, et al., to send a rocket to the moon ... and farther," McCalls said. Three-year-old Prince William, second in line to the British throne, is expected to be enrolled this month, along with 23 other young pupils, at a multiracial Montes sori kindergarten class where he will be taught such non-royal chores as washing the dishes. YevgsEy Yevtcshenio, the Soviet Union's "angry young man" of the '50s, published a poem in the Commu-j, nist Party daily Pravda in support of Soviet leader Mikhail Gorbachev's drive for economic renewal. The poem, "The No-Risk Takers," poked fun at bureaucrats and managers who prefer an easy life to "rolling up their sleeves and helping transform the Soviet economy." Once at odds with authorities, Yevtushenko, 52, has mellowed with age. Last November he received a state prize for his poem, "Mama and The Neutron Bomb." West German gpyhunter Hans Joachim Tiedge, who defected to East Germany last month, has written a letter to his three daughters defending his decision and saying he is being well cared for. "Sometime in the not too distant future we will meet again here," he said in the letter. In Tehran, Iran, well-known singer Neemat Agasi was publicly flogged along with some of his audience for gambling and drinking at a party. Agasi received 50 lashes and was sentenced to one year in exile. A Tehran public prosecutor who oversaw the whippings said afterward- "As I promised in my speech before Friday prayers, perpetra tors of corruption, prostitution and vice will be dealt with resolutely." Pete Rose, player-manager of the Cincinnati Reds who singled twice Sunday to equal Ty Cobb's all-time career hit record of 4,191, didn't play Monday because the Reds' opponent, the San Diego Padres, started left-hander Dave Dravecky. Rose plans to play Tuesday against right hander LaMarr Hoyt. From Newt Wires l;r:l r;-.l:y' pverr".;: HIk;;;': c members CJ.X 1V. )C- :"rl 11 Sr.. t af t!cctid?33 fcsrCc J&dr&s? x in 1 7 ? V'J cr. tab cf west r::;r-,T LthstllllcfFA: cl.j.: "'I ti Hliiknai sr:iv:i ciiii tecr.lo to 1 il.e korfes, then tiznai i'-v.-iilr.i st t:..3 totKCn," t-"M 3 iit""f IV. .:1- Li ?it a whose H V-J- ii ttdlHt'f -in 1 14x:n zmrg tlt.o I kV : i H. v. r; -wlo asked ivtli' f s n,";;k4 mi her fasafly one fcT t? I"? v, Ikh Iial mi left ''ziizh.'Al'yctiyj "!:, .jv'-.m-ij 5-r -Iw-h-'tcrtostay lnoricr.s." Neo-Nazis go on trial in-Seattle SEATTLE Eleven sell professed neo-Nazis went trial h Seattle on Mond ye-,'! federal racketeering charges stei?te!n;&;:- &ctMtks prosec utors contend were simti at overthrowing the U.& j.;;nf.n'nt. Aiifwv.rKlca ordered elaborate security rnuu.vs ;:. j-xsy selection b?i:i. Two &ntied guards were assigned to each cf the U defendants and metal detectors were set up at building and courtn.crn entrances. , TJhe trial, which officials said could last up to six r.!e;;ihs, will cover the alleged racketcsnrig activities of a violent white suprc marist sect called 'The Crikr" or the "Silent Bro&eihood,M ' - Tits indictment ewers crimes committed in five s tilts, including the June ISSi maefcine-gun murder in Deiner, Cola, cf Aha Berg, a sharp tongaed Jewish radio talk show host who fcai ceedled the white supremacists, Iran, Iraq report raid on front MANAMA, Bahrain Iran and Iran reported a ixjcr fcnnmd battle on the northern front of their Fersiaa Gulf war zom f.!ur.i with each side S2jir3 it killed hundreds. ' Baghdad also said its warplaacs feambed Kliarg fe!r.d zzm dropping eight tens cf explosives on Iran's mda ell tzncl h tl . 2 hteit in a series cf tzlii that tc-n zzt month. . Iran said its troops pcMtreicd fcr tcl.lr i l:zki l-cs on the northern front, killing hundreds cf scalers c;-t;:r:::j &tri';'.5 territory, but Iraq said its forces rebelled the attack tr'i killrj fo:ir.ij cf Iranians. Trial publicity angers lawyer LOS ANC2LES A hrrjzt !:.r Elchr.ri rr;i;; , ch: :r:l v.ith one murder ar.d suspected in t'v i cf Ij CJ l1:r.tzy accused ofHctals cf finding his client gjilt ttfyro In tf.J, ' 'They arstalktng atout ghlritH ad nontft" 5 L.;" ecrUSesiesof apprcdatiaa to pcojla vM hdp ; J vJdi ! j li ? lr,r A!!on Adashek, I-sArsiirSMf rl- Czi !?.. Ir : ;--:dcrcf :itKiV .1::. - v. i - icthcr First teaclier in sp::ce in trvilnmg V Z . " " -.-...4 iJ I ; v : ;e r-uuttle -f.rhcrfilt : . 1 Ccn- . '.cl.nrlll oSf'edx-dsy - .--'cjtioriS , j ' 111 be ..;.tthe . Uimn IhnsU M:Ai;l , , aa?v .m'IH -jf;' cc?4 N.B., w&3 clscsa fx.n &su.,-4 ;r . -1 1-2 1 if ' ) r -1 Kissicij, wlich n hmth a z .f: f -i,- c, .icL-noCallty'sCa .t. In c t3l::rr.:-:: .;t5l : . 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