Wednesday, July 9, 1986/The Battalion/Page 5 World and Nation Waldheim inaugurated as president VIENNA, Austria (AP) — Kurt Waldheim was inaugurated as presi dent on Tuesday to cheers from sup porters who berated a small group protesters for trying to remind ““■^ Austrians of his purported involve- Bient in Nazi war crimes. vUlB Waldheim, ()7, denounced ami- 7loll Bemitism and called for reconcilia- Jon in his inaugural address. I “It must ... be our intention that is renewed every day, to consider Ind treat each of our fellow-citizens ks brother and sister — regardless of which race, which religion and which conviction they hold,” he said. The former U.N. secretary-gen- |ral was elected last month as Aus- jria’s sixth postwar president follow ing a campaign dominated by allegations that he hid his role as a Nazi intelligence officer in the Bal kans. The ambassadors of the United States, the Soviet Union and Israel were absent from the ceremony. The U.S. and Soviet embassies both said the omission was not a protest and that their ambassadors had prior commitments. Israeli Ambassador Michael Elit- zur was withdrawn immediately af ter Waldheim’s June election. The six-year presidential term is mostly ceremonial. Rabbi Avraham Weiss of New York City, who led a small group of Americans and Austrians in protest outside Waldheim’s office, said, “We proclaim that if Austria wishes to forget, we shall remember.” The crowd of about 40 Austrians listening to Weiss grew rapidly after Waldheim made a triumphal entry to his office in the Hofburg building about 300 yards away from Parlia ment. The ornate palace is a former resi dence of Austrian emperors. Adolf Hitler stood on one of its balconies to acknowledge the cheers of thou sands after the annexation of Aus tria by Germany in 1938. Waldheim, the first postwar presi dent representing the conservative People’s Party, did not look toward the protesters as he walked amid cheers from Parliament to the Hof burg. Six demonstrators wore striped prison clothes. They were joined by Beate Klarsfeld, the Paris-based Nazi hunter. About 1,500 Waldheim supporters surrounded them. “Get out of Austria!” some shouted. Others hurled anti-Semitic curses rarely heard in public since the Hitler era. The crowd drowned out Weiss’ efforts to speak with the chant, “Long live Waldheim!” The demonstrators stood on chairs and held up posters depicting Waldheim in German uniform and a facsimile of the U.N. War Crimes Commission document listing him as wanted for war crimes. icludetlit| ich.” Ttifi Houston! e parkin|| d Deache | agency to ect beach ; parkint ives saic ;ns up be id didntf lermissioi ■aid. Dow Jones posts 2nd big setback NEW YORK (AP) — Stock prices suffered big losses again Tuesday as investors reeled f rom the shock of Monday’s severe set back on Wall Street. Trading on the New York Stock Exchange was the busiest it has been in about three months. The Dow Jones average of 30 industrials finished down 18.27 points at 1820.73, well above its lowest levels of the day. The blue chip indicator plunged when trading opened and was down about 30 points several times during the session. The market made several unsuc cessful attempts to rebound be fore buying resumed in earnest in the final minutes. Although analysts had antic ipated this year’s rally would lose momentum, the magnitude of the market’s reversal startled in vestors. The Dow Jones industrial average registered its worst point- loss in history of 61.87 points on Monday. _ The and jury ig at the 966 say s insanity j won a 1 lived. e Tom Travis , at the an knew /hen hf campus [, 1966. 6 people Tore pi led with ran-sizej 1 hitman's aking 0 ' “S, led to problem in, il o be ar; Uackwell or a v '8j e,” said e who is s d crime lily. , ng id' 01 , aware ol lie was his liff tower. ith His» i or idicatio; o h o-$2°; offers 11 Postal Service to finish current year with profit WASHINGTON (AP) — Post master General Albert Casey pre dicted Tuesday the Postal Service will post a $414 million profit in the current budget year, a dramatic re covery which almost certainly will stave off general rate increases in 1986 or 1987. The agency posted a $251 million loss in the 1985 budget year, which ended Sept. 30. It takes 18 months to prepare and implement a rate in crease and none is in the works, spokesman Robert Hoobingsaid. In a recent report to Congress, Janet D. Steiger, chairman of the Postal Rate Commission, which must approve any rate change, said she expects no rate case to be filed this year. How long the first-class postage rate can stay at 22 cents depends on such variables as inflation, which has been stable, and the size of any wage increase in new postal labor con tracts that will go into effect in July 1987. It would also depend on the suc cess of efforts in Congress to shift $1.7 billion in retirees’ health care and other costs from the taxpayers to postal rate payers. The mail agency traditionally builds a surplus in the fall and win ter and loses money in spring and summer, when mail volume falls. This year, the surplus is ahead of projections and losses are well below expectations. Casey attributed the financial per formance to a more than 7 percent volume increase, reduced overtime payments due to reliance on part- timers to handle mail during busy periods, and lower inflation. Chihuahua elections contested CHIHUAHUA, Mexico (AP) — The ruling Institutional Revolution ary Party wasted no time in declar ing its triumph in Chihuahua state gubernatorial elections Tuesday. The conservative National Action Party, or PAN, had had high hopes for its .first gubernatorial victory in history in this vast northern state bordering Texas and New' Mexico. The PAN, claiming government- instituted fraud in Sunday’s guber natorial, municipal and legislative elections in Chihuahua, announced it would seek a nullification of many races and threatened to launch “strictly nonviolent protests” to force the government to play fair. But the PAN and other private or ganizations that had predicted foul play and had pledged to retaliate with massive protests still were un sure how to mobilize its supporters. The PRI, as the ruling party is popularly known, announced after the polls closed Sunday that its can didate, Fernando Baeza, had tri umphed in “legitimate elections.” Results are not official until the state election commission and legis lature certify them on Sunday. Oil company charged with bribery WASHINGTON (AP) — The Securities and Exchange Com mission charged Ashland Oil, Inc., a Kentucky-based company, and former chairman Orin E. At kins Tuesday with trying to bribe a foreign official. Ashland and Atkins, without admitting or denying the allega tions in the SEC complaint, con sented to an order that restrains them from future violations of the Foreign Corrupt Practices Act. Ashland, headquartered in Russell, Ky., is primarily engaged in refining, transporting and marketing crude oil products. The complaint alleges that Ashland and Atkins made pay ments to James T. W. Landon at the time when Landon was an of ficer, employee or representative for the government of Oman. Major quake hits Southern California PALM SPRINGS, Calif. (AP) — A severe earthquake shook Southern California early Tues day, damaging a major aqueduct, shattering windows, triggering rockslides and blackouts and causing some minor injuries. The quake measured 6.0 on the Richter scale, the strongest in the southern part of the state in seven years, said seismologist Kate Hutton of the California In stitute of Technology in Pasa dena, It was centered about 12 miles northwest of Palm Springs, said Dennis Meredith, a spokesman for the seismology lab at the Insti tute of Technology. Preliminary indications were that the ground slipped about two inches sideways along a stretch 10 miles long and six miles deep, said Hutton. Court reinstates charges against Goetz ALBANY, N.Y. (AP) — The state’s top court reinstated at tempted murder and assault charges Tuesday against Bern- hard Goetz for shooting four youths on a Manhattan subway. Goetz, 39, an electronics worker, was praised as a heroic crime victim by some and blasted as a trigger-happy vigilante by others, after he admitted shoot ing the four teen-agers on Dec. 22, 1984, when one of them asked him for $5. He was indicted by a grand jury on four counts of attempted murder and four counts of as sault, but those charges were thrown out by lower courts. The New York Court of Appeals unanimously overruled those lower courts and declared that a jury must get a chance to decide Goetz’ guilt or innocence. A heat wave steamed much of the East for a third day Tuesday with temperatures near 100 and high humidity that fueled sales of ice cream and air conditioners, brought record demand for elec tricity and threatened crops al ready stricken by drought. By noon, temperatures were already in the 90s from Washing ton, D.C., across parts of Vir ginia, the Carolinas, Georgia and Tennessee. The weather service advised people to check frequently on friends and relatives living alone and said the elderly and people working outside should avoid exertion. On Monday, record highs were posted from southern New En gland into the Carolinas. • i - ' <.«$ Hi V' - ■ ■' Taco Bell’s Star Attractions at Out ol this World Low Prices r i i i i i With this coupon thru July 31, 1986 11am - 11pm -I Res T QCO Bean Burrito 49 GIVE LOOD! THE BLOOD CENTER at Wadley .49 Burrito Supreme.... .99 ] .49 Beefy Tostada 99 .49 Encherito 99 .49 Combo Burrito 99 . .79 Beef Burrito 99 Tostada Pintos ‘n Cheese... Nachos .79 a UtW** Seafood Sa\ad 9*99 Taco Sa\ad 9.99 Pizazz Pizza 1.99 Quantities unlimited TACO Not good with any other offer 'BELL Heat wave hits East for 3rd day straight © ft ft ft ft 1 t Bryan/Collese Station Date: july 14,15,16,17 Time: 11:00 a-m- — 7:00 p.m. Place: Fountain & “A” Lounge-Corps Area Poster designed by Felicia Gardner, a student at H. Grady Spruce High School. 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