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C* Tue 1 RAMALLAH, Occupied West Bank (AP) — Israel’s army isolated the occupied territories Tuesday, but Palestinians threw gasoline bombs at patrolling soldiers and the Israelis opened Fire and wounded eight of the demonstrators. The unprecedented crackdown on the 1.5 million Arabs in the occu pied West Bank and Gaza Strip was aimed at halting four months of un rest and at preventing mass demon strations by Palestinians on Wednes day’s 12th anniversary of Land Day, when Israeli soldiers killed six Arabs protesting land confiscation. tossed rocks at each other in the streets. They called the game “Jews and Arabs.” Hundreds of protesters have been wounded since riots began Dec. 8 in the West Bank and Gaza, which Is rael captured from Jordan and Egypt in (he 1967 Middle East War. The death toll stands at 119 Palestin ians and one Israeli soldier, accord ing to U.N. figures. Foreign relief workers were bar red from entering the occupied lands. Thousands of police were mo bilized Tuesday evening to enforce curfews in Arab towns in Israel. Arabs reported that demonstra tors took to the streets in some areas and that Israeli troops fired at the curfew' violators. The eight Arabs were wounded in the village of Zaita, 40 miles northwest of Jerusalem, the army and the Palestine Press Service reported. Defense Minister Yitzhak Rabin and Lt. Gen. Dan Shomron, Israel’s military chief of staff, threatened for the first time Tuesday to close the territories for an extended period. “For now, the decision to close the areas is for three days,” Rabin said on Israel radio. “But I’ve always said we have to adjust our measures to confront every eventuality.” Closing the occupied lands is in tended to quell the violence by im posing collective punishment on Pal estinians and.to keep out journalists, whose reports the Israelis claim feed the rebellion. Palestinians in the territories threw rocks and gasoline bombs. Among the protesters reported wounded was 13-year-old girl. In Ramallah, small children Although general access for jour nalists has been withdrawn, U.S. television pools were allowed into the West Bank and Gaza on Tuesday and some individual journalists managed to get past roadblocks. Sheriff calls death of Indian candidate ‘another murder’ LUMBERTON, N.C. (AP) — A young man was charged Tuesday with killing an Indian judicial candi date and an alleged accomplice com mitted suicide, in a case the sheriff called “just another murder” stem ming from a broken romance, not a political assassination. The death Saturday of Julian Pierce initially was characterized by authorities as a political slaying, and some people in Robeson County speculated it was the work of some one who objected to an Indian be coming a judge. The county’s pop ulation is evenly divided among Indians, blacks and whites. “I can assure the world that there was no political involvement in the case,” Sheriff Hubert Stone said at a news conference. “I think the people of Robeson County will understand that it’sjust another murder.” Pierce was a popular, 42-year-old legal services lawyer and Lumbee In dian. He was running against the county district attorney for Superior Court judge in a county where racial tensions erupted in February when a hostage was taken at the local news paper. Sandy Gordon Chavis, 24, a Lum bee Indian, was arrested Tuesday on a murder warrant and was being held at the county jail, Stone said. Pierce was shot in the chest and side early Saturday morning. Gun men blasted through a broken win dow in his kitchen door and entered the room to shoot him again in the head with a 12-gauge shotgun, Stone said. Stone said Chavis said in a confes sion that Goins had pulled the trig ger on the pump shotgun that killed Pierce. The gun belonged to Cha vis’s brother, Stone said. Goins had gone to Locklear’s house after the slaying, but “didn’t tell her he had killed Pierce,” Stone said. Neither Chavis nor Goins, a secu rity guard in Raleigh, had criminal records. Stone said. Both were from Pembroke. The dead man was identified as John Anderson Goins, 24, also an Indian, whose body was found in a closet at his father’s home Tuesday with a bullet wound to the head. A murder warrant also was issued for Goins, Stone said. Pierce was dating Ruth Locklear, whose daughter, Shannon Bullard, had been involved with Goins, Stone said. D f0 «8 ™i T© Monday, April 4 Letter Day Banner Contest Judging Drink Specials at The Edge and Zephyrs Tuesday, April 5 Children’s Day - Boys and Girls Club Picnic and Baseball Game at Olsen Park Texas A&M vs. Sam Houston State Park at 5:30 (Courtesy of Dairy Queen) Wednesday, April 6 Greek Games Location: Fraternity Row on Wellborn Rd. 2:00-7:00 Thursday, April 7 Recognition Reception and Awards Location: Aggieland Inn at 7:00 Friday, April 8 All-Greek Golf Tournament Location: Bryan Municipal Golf Course Remember throughout the Week Greek God/Goddess Contest MSC Open House -T Shirt Sales -Button Sales For Information Contact: Kelly Robertson 696-2362 Robert Marrano 846-1918 Particularly harsh restrictions have been put on the Gaza Strip. The rebellion began there and the 6- mile-long Mediterranean coastal area is easier to isolate. “No human beings are on the streets,” said Rashad al Shawaa, who was deposed by Israel as mayor of Gaza City in 1983. “It’s like a ceme tery. The army announced over loudspeakers: ‘Anyone who leaves Mtth their home will be shot.’ He told the Associated Press by telephone he saw soldiers fire on a few Palestinians who went out in his neighborhood in defiance of the curfew. ..ircuii I Shawaa said the telephone call was the first he had received in 26 hours. Telephone service to Gaza was cut Monday and most remained down Tuesday night. Bernard Mills, the U.N. Relief and Works Agency director in Ga/.a, told U.N. officials by radio: “You have 650,000 people under house arrest.” Foreign journalists asked the Su preme Court to overturn the order banning them from the territories, the first in more than 20 years of Is raeli occupation. TOWSON, Md. (AP) —Afi Conrail engineer was sentei day to the maximum term years in prison and fined Si causing 16 deaths in Amtrats train accident. Rick L. Gates, 33, of pleaded guilty Feb. IGtotht misdemeanor manslaughter Gates admitted in a swornsta# of facts to smoking marijuana train, which has been under gation for several months, at ing to make several safety that might have preventedtltl dent. Baltimore County C Judge Joseph P. Murphy didn’t think he was under ence of marijuana. “But what he did in terms! ure to follow procedureswastt us that he didn’t give a dam: just didn’t care.” Gates and family members courtroom wept as prosecutors five victim impact statements relatives of those people who killed in the crash. In return for the guilty plea, more County State’s Atio: Sandra O’Connor agreed too idate the names of all 16 victir. one count, which reduced the mum sentence from 80 yean $16,000 in fine *s to five Yean S1,000 fine. thtJ “They (Goins and Miss Bullard) started having problems and they broke up,” Stone said. “Two war rants were issued last week by the girlfriend’s mother, charging Goins witn trespassing. Grains felt Pierce had something to do with it. He got mad and he killed him.” Pierce had been running for Su perior Court judge in the May 3 Democratic primary against District Attorney Joe Freeman Britt, who has a reputation for never losing a death penalty case. Because there was no Republican opposition, the primary winner would have been elected in November. Because Pierce is dead, state law provides that Britt, who is white, would become judge. But Pierce’s supporters planned to meet Thurs day with Gov. Jim Martin to request a special legislative session to seek an exception to the law. World Briefs Aspirin found to reduce heart attacksl ATLANTA (AP) — A two-year international study of more than 17,000 heart patients showed that aspirin and the seldom-used drug streptokinase, taken together af ter the onset of chest pains, re duce deaths among heart attack victims. The Second International Study on Infarct Survival, involv ing patients in 400 hospitals in 16 countries, is billed as the largest heart attack treatment study ever. It was presented Tuesday at the annual meeting of the Amei College of Cardiology. T he study showed thai chewed aspirin tablet oradi nation of the drug streptokin; or SK, improved the survival The rate improved more,! ever, when the two were taken gether. M ortality among heart al victims given the combination 7.8 percent after five weeks, pared with 12.8 percent for tients given a placebo. Soviets don’t tell patients of cancer BETHESDA, Md. (AP) — So viet doctors participating in an in ternational teleconference said Tuesday that they routinely con ceal the truth from patients diag nosed as having cancer and they questioned the American practice of fully informing patients of a tumorous condition. “It’s hardly a good idea to tell a patient directly that he has a can cer,” Dr. Nikolai Napalkov, presi dent of the U.S.S.R. Oncological Society and a leading cancer re searcher in the Soviet Union, said. “Only in rare cases, the patient refuses treatni does the doctor have theoi lion to tell the patient.” American doctors taking p in the conference strongly! agreed. “T he sense of trust thatf between a dcotor and very important,” Dr. SteverJ Rosenberg, chief of surgerya National Cancer Institute, “It’s impossible for me toimajj giving quality care withouttelj the patient the full story.” UT students’ blood tested for AIDS AUSTIN (AP) — Blood sam ples drawn from University of Texas students will be tested for the virus that leads to AIDS as part of a nationwide effort to col lect statistics on the fatal disease, school officials say. The campus Student Health Center, which takes about 400 samples a month for routine blood tests, will send a portion of each sample to the Centers for Disease Control for testing. UT will be one of about 25 colleges, and the only one in Texas, in- cluded in the study. To keep individual results anonymous, the samp] will he labeled only withthef 1 son’s sex, race and age, and* the sample was taken. Also, the CDC will throw! every l()th sample submitted. Dr. Scott Spear, a healthceej physician who is an organize!! the study, said individual i dents and individual univers will not be able to fiiidoutres-j of the tests. Each universit'l supposed to collect about 1 sam p 1 es. 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