THE BATTALION MONDAY, APRIL 16, 1979 Page 5 Classified Ads Cont’d HELP WANTED Uganda reports massacre, elusive Amin SWENSEN*S p\\- 3ri- lile igh ate ex’ ase Now Accepting I Applications or AH Part-time and Full-time Positions !Cooks, cashiers, dishwashers, Mountain personnel, and waiters/ tresses. Pick up an application \at Swensen’s, Culpepper Plaza, ▼ X ♦ ♦ ♦ ♦ ♦ ♦ ♦ ♦ 1 United Press International KAMPALA, Uganda — Officials of Uganda’s new government said Saturday missing President Idi Amin’s secret police massacred more than 100 prisoners with hand gre nades shortly before the fall of Kam pala to Tanzanian and Ugandan exile troops. President Youssef Lule, sworn in Friday as Uganda’s new leader, told a news conference Saturday that Amin had so far eluded all efforts to capture him. Diplomatic sources said the burly dictator, whose reign of terror killed an estimated 500,000 in eigh years, had already fled the country. “Amin is very fast indeed,” Lule said. “Every time we get near him, he shows us his heels.” In his news conference, Lule reit erated “the rule of law must prevail in Uganda” and directed the coun try’s new chief justice to get the courts working again. Lule also indicated the United States would shortly recognize his government, which was drawn up in a secret meeting of various Ugandan exiles in northern Tanzania while the fighting was still under way to over throw Amin. Although military spokesmen ^ai awenseu s, ouipepper r-iaza, ▼ _ Amm s death house I COOKS ^ hides bodies, luxury Full Time | Or Part Time lixperience helpful, but will ■ train. Pick up an application ^ at Swensens. || Culpepper Plaza, ■ College Station )R mal sa itions, ur res.' 1 DOMINO S PIZZA ilow hiring delivery per-i iscnnel. Must have own 'car and insurance. 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WALLACE United Press International KAMPALA, Uganda — Idi Amin’s house of death is a pleasant-looking, three-story pink stucco building tucked away in a quiet part of Kam pala next to the French ambassador’s luxurious home. It looks innocent, but the stench of death gives it away. Government officials say as many as 500,000 people perished at the hands of Amin’s dreaded State Re search Bureau agents, many of them in this headquarters bureau. The stench was heavy in the humid tropical air Saturday, notice- ! able a hundred yards away. 1 Seven bloated bodies lay sprawled in the sun outside, covered with crawling insects. The entrance way was pockmarked by hundreds of bullets, evidence of the battle for the head quarters when Tanzanian troops captured the city Wednesday. A narrow, dirty staircase led below ground level to the interrogation cells. Weapons were scattered around in heaps. There was more death down here. In one 20-by-20-foot concrete cell seven bodies lay by the walls. One body was huddled, as if in sleep, at the foot of the stairs. The cells had no windows, no air vents, no sinks or toilets. Down a tunnel there were six smaller cells, apparently used for sol itary confinement. The cell doors were twisted by the force of grenade explosions. Here are the most grisly sights of all: human bodies torn to pieces by close-impact grenades. Arms, legs and heads are scattered about. Government officials said at least 100 Ugandan prisoners were killed here by the secret police as the city fell. However, a trooper who helped capture the headquarters said the Tanzanians also lobbed grenades into the cells to flush out State Re search Bureau agents who were hid ing there from the invaders. Upstairs there were a series of or dinary offices. They held the secrets of the secret police — the killings, the spying and the high style enjoyed killers in a country where virtually everyone else had forgotten the taste of salt and sugar. One room was filled with im ported radio transmitters. Wire tapping equipment lay scattered ab out. Invoices showed the secret police recently imported hundreds of thousands of dollars worth of West German BMW automobiles. There were what appeared to be American-built memory banks for computers. Piles of pets, shells and handcuffs lay scattered around the floors. And more bodies. One bloated corpse was draped over the stairs. Another lay alone in a room. They were apparently secret police killed by the Tanzanians. ched.; persi!* DIXIE CHICKEN i time Maintenance man needed. [.00/per hour plus other benefits, leal, carpeting, plumbing, and 1a! work. Apply In Person 309 University Drive, C-S. AVON TO BUY OR SELL lALL 822-1430 127119 ■mien or women, students, ■ couples for Houston Post motor P f ijoutes - present and summer, p Rarly morning hours. Excellent ^ I income for part time job. d ■ ^ 822-4351 or 696-8032 1 DIXIE "chTcKEN" |Need 1 full time person from 8:30- J 14:00, Mon.-Fri. minimum wage, | $2.90 plus other benefits. Start im- | Mediately. Apply In Person Only 307 University Drive i34tfn , ooooooooooo* girls to phone in my office.*! Two shifts available: 4-7 p.m., 7-10 p.m. §Call Debbie 779-9636, 6-10 p.m. 13115 ^ ooooooooooooo< Woman gets Easter gift freedom from bathtub United Press International CHARLESTON, W.Va. — Be rtha Johnson prayed for one thing Easter Sunday — freedom from her bathtub — and she got it. The 88-year-old woman, living alone and afflicted with Parkinson’s disease and severe arthritis, decided to bathe last Wednesday. But she didn’t have the strength to get out when she finished. For four days, she stayed in the tub. A small girl, en route to church early Sunday, heard the woman’s feeble cries for help and told her grandmother. An ambulance squad rushed in and found Mrs. Johnson exhausted, thirsty and famished. “I prayed somone would find me today,” Mrs. Johnson said. At Charleston General Hospital, nurses found her sore, tired and “very disoriented, very upset.” She slept peacefully, though, after a hot meal. Mrs. Johnson became trapped in her old porcelain tub on another holiday — Christmas Eve in 1977. Neighbors beard cries for help and helped her She spent 38 hours in the tub then. After that experience, a plumber installed a handrail. But over the weekend, Mrs. Johnson lacked strength to pull herself out. Now you know United Press International In 1927, silent movie heroine Norma Talmadge became the first star to leave her imprints outside Grauman’s Chinese Theater when she accidentally fell into fresh ce ment, leaving publicity men to make it a Hollywood tradition. Railroad, ICC to be asked about rising coal rates DIXIE CHICKEN Need 4 people for maintenance, afternoons or mornings, nee “^Minimum Wage Plus Other Benefits APPLY IN PERSON 307 UNIVERSITY DRIVE Check the Battalion ads! '■w Cal1 845-2611 When Are Services You Need No Secret' At All? WHEN OVER 30.000 PEOPLE READ IT IN THE BATTALION Looking for a housekeeper? Baby sitter? Someone to repair your lawn mower? Rely on our classifieds to service your needs! 845-2611 United Press International HOUSTON — Railroad officials and the Interstate Commerce Com mission today will be asked by a panel of congressmen to explain why fees for hauling millions of tons of coal across the nation have risen as much as 60 percent since 1976. Investigators, led by Rep. Bob Eckhardt, D-Texas, and the staff of his Subcommittee on Oversight and Investigations, want to know whether ambiguous language in new railroad regulations has confused the ICC and left it at the mercy of the rail industry for self-serving statistics used in rate-setting. During hearings in Houston today and San Antonio Tuesday, the com mittee staff will offer evidence that operating 100-car unit trains on nonstop, 1,600-mile trips such as those that originate at Wyoming mines “is like child’s play” and there fore undeserving of steady price boosts. The outcome could affect the price of manufactured goods and utility costs from the Atlantic Coast to the Rockies and lead to another revision of railroad economic rules. A committee economist said no one is alleging price gouging. Inves- jtigators, in fact, may lean more heav ily on the ICC than the railroads be cause the commission has never stated its methods for evaluating rate increase requests since passage in 1976 of the Railroad Revitalization and Regulatory Reform Act. The law provided 24 months for the ICC to develop standards to ensure the railroads were operating under “honest, economic and effi cient managements.” “It’s now been 36 months and the ICC still does not have such proce dures and standards,” the economist said. fupfnamba Eddie Dominguez ’66 3® If you want the real thing, not frozen or canned . . . We call It “Mexican Food Supreme.’’ Dallas location: 3071 Northwest Hwy 352-8570 have said Amin would hang if caught and tried, Lule was cautious in his comments on the fallen dictator. “It has been alleged Amin has committed crimes against human ity,” Lule said. “The evidence will have to be examined. I am not a judge.” Amin has not been seen or heard from in several days and there was growing evidence he may already have left the country. CIA Director Stansfield Turner said in Washing ton recently that Amin’s immediate family was in exile in Iraq, but it was not known if he planned to join them there. Diplomatic sources Amin’s per sonal jet, given to him in happier times as a gift by Israel, had been refueled at the Soroti air base some 140 miles northeast of Kampala and he had probably left the country aboard it. These sources also said the per sonal car of Amin’s latest wife, the young and beautiful “Miss Sarah,” also had been found in northern Uganda abandoned near the Zaire border. In perhaps the most grisly discov ery in the aftermath of the liberation of Kampala, officials found the torn remains of an estimated 100 prison ers at the headquarters of the State Research Bureau, Amin’s dreaded secret police. Officials said that when it became clear Kampala would fall to invading Tanzanian and Ugandan exile troops last Wednesday, agents at the State Research Bureau lobbed grenades into interrogation rooms packed with defenseless prisoners. In a visit to the headquarters Saturday, the brutality of Amin’s re gime was apparent everywhere. Bodies still littered the capital from the final battle for Kampala, which finally fell to Tanzanian and Ugandan exile liberators at dawn Wednesday. An employee of the city mortuary charged with collecting dead bodies from the streets reported he had picked up 200 on Saturday alone and expected the figure to more than double once all had been found. Military officials said one body found near the capital’s International Conference Center, was believed to be that of white, British-born Bob Astles, one of Amin’s closest confid ants and most notorious aides who was also wanted for questioning for many murders. Government sources also re ported that Lule’s new administra tion had demanded $1 billion from Libya for the lives of 40 Libyan mili tary prisoners captured during the fighting. The sources said Libyan strongman. Col. Moammar Khadafy, had countered with an offer of $400 million and that negotiations were continuing. Khadafy, virtually Amin’s only remaining ally, sent some 2,000 Li byan troops to Uganda to help de fend Amin. But, as the Tanzanians claimed victory after victory and Amin’s army began to collapse, Khadafy hastily withdrew most of the Libyan forces to prevent them being captured or killed. NOW LEASING FOR SUMMER AND FALL. OPEN WEEKENDS. Barcelona APARTMENTS NEWLY REMODELED ! ALL UTILITIES PAID and... Individual Heating and Air, Cable T.V., 3 Laundry Rooms, Swimming Pool, Security Guard, Party Room, and Close to Campus. 693>0261 700 Dominik, College Station BUDGET 315 Unlv. 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