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WUHLD Pope's funeral set VATICAN CITY ? Cardinal^ of the Roman Catholic Church, so soon brought back for the somber ritual and challenging task of papal succession, on Saturday set the funeral of Pope John Paul I for Wednesday and the conclave to elect a new pontiff for Oct. 14. As the cardinals met in the Apostolic Palace, a line of mourners in tears, prayers or reverent silence filed past the body of the Pope as it lay in state three floors below in the palace's Clementine Hall. Hijacker makes stop AMSTERDAM ^Netherlands- An armed hijacker with three Finnair crew members as hostages touched down here briefly early Sunday after leaving Helsinki, Finland, where he had fre^i 45 hostages and collected $206,000 ransom, authorities said. The jet landed at Amsterdam's Schiphol Airport at about 5 a.m. (11 p.m.) An airport spokesman said the plane was refueled with Dutch government approval. The plane departed after about a half hour and the pilot radioed to air traffic control here that it was headed back to Helsinki. Airport officials quoted the hijacker, identified by Helsinki police as Aarno LamminDorras.37. as saying,"We are going back up north." Beirut fighting intense BEIRUT, Lebanon ? Syrian peacekeeping troops and Christian militiamen battled with rocket, mortar and artillery fire Saturday in the heaviest fighting since the 1975-76 civil war. Each side blamed the other for the flareup that reduced many areas of east Beirut to rubble before the presidents of Syria and Lebanon reached agreement on a cease-fire. SUB CENTER^ Eat A Big One I FREE DELIVERY 765-08 THE LION'S HEAD RESTAURANT Student Steak Night $3.! j Every Monday, Tuesday and Wednesi Includes: Choice Steak. Salad Bar. (Potatoes and Fresh Bread BACArvfltiAn DAAiiirAfl FarThSc Snori "WT"' w- "wo - "6r ww' Special Not Good For Groups Over 6 People 741 Saluda Ave. Five Points Proper attire required. ? u L I- ML ? NflTlflN ill m m mmtmmm Senate OKs bomb WASHINGTON ? The Senate voted 68-1 Saturday to authorize spending $3 billion for nuclear weapons development including recommended production of the highly controversial neutron bomb. PrpciHont Parfor annniinpoH in Anpil ha timnlH m. 1VM1UV1IV v/MA VVK IMIIIVUIIVVU 111 4 11 llv' YT UU1U defer a decision on whether to build the so-called "people-killer" bomb and see what the Russians might offer in return for scrapping it. The matter has remained in limbo since then. But the very prospect of neutron warheads deployed in central Europe has stirred up an international ban-the-bomb drive backed by the Soviets. T r i i n r* it/^n I I i ^ i v~\ 11 uii is i ^imiy uyuin WASHINGTON ? The nation's trains are starting to roll again after a clerks union that defied President Carter obeyed a federal judge and agreed ? at least temporarily ? to end a four-day strike that strangled rail traffic from coast to coast. But a full resumption of service is expected to be slow, and industry officials estimate it will take four to six days for operations to return to normal. More GSA charges BALTIMORE -The U.S. attorney who obtained the first indictments in the General Services Administration scandal says he will expand the investigation and deliver more indictments. m 1 o i ii_i ?i ? " * ... i nt' 10 inuu:imenis reiurnea rnaay cnarge uiat employees of the federal government's chief landlord and supplier accepted cash and a wide variety of merchandise ranging from jewelry to a sand blaster from suppliers who were paid for goods the government never got. CHANELO k PIZZA w 2702 Rosewood \FAST FREE | We now use a Hot Box for all delivery orders. "3 Call ^ a ^ * =j|| Z34-88I I CHECKO I Clip This Coupon q | MONDAY iALLTHESPAGHE I ni | You Can Eat i $L< 7QQ-A3A3 n 1 I [.SPECIALS GOOD FOR DIN m - * ^1 STRTE Probation for doctor CHARLESTON ? A McClellanville physician accused of 102 counts of conspiring to distribute drugs has been fined and put on probation after pleading guilty to one count in exchange for having the others dropped. Charleston County Court Judge Theodore D. Stoney Thursday ordered Dr. James F. Dorn to pay a $1,000 firia onrl cnAnrl ?rnn??n am ?/\n iiui, anu iww yCQIa un ^luuaiiun. Dom was charged in a 102- count indictment with allegedly conspiring to distribute drugs ? particularly amphaplex and quaalude ? between November 1976 and June 1978. Dorn's attorney, state Sen. William Doar, said his client's license to prescribe certain drugs had been suspended. /r\ II r\\ / l Koner-riane crasnes SUMTER ? One person has been hospitalized and another treated and released from a Sumter hospital after an amusement ride accident at the Sumter County Fair. Betty Jean Montgomery, 18, of Sumter was reported in stable condition last night at Tuomey Hospital. Christopher McKenny, 20, also of Sumter, was also injured in the accident, but his injuries did not require hospitalization. McKenny and Montgomery were passengers on a ride known as the "roller-plane" when the accident occurred at about 7:30 p.m. Friday, Detective Harry ! Pecko said He said the ride has two cages on either end of a metal boom. The cages spin as the boom rotates. As the end on which Mc Kenny and Montgomery were riding began to go upward, their cage fell. No one on the ground was injured, Pecko said. The ride, which is owned by Amusements of | America, was immediately dismantled. i a i __ DELIVERY ^ Hours: Mon.-Thurs. 11:30a. m. -1 a.m. ^ FRI.-SAT. 11:30 a.m. - 2 a.m. [j 0 Sunday 1 1:30 -1 2 p.m. UTTHESE DEALS! Clip This Coupon I ! WEDNESDAY ! i "| ?Tlj Buy one Pizza J ! get 1 free cheese j 99: pizza of same size.j !E IN OR CARRY OUT ORDERS ONLY j/'