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-wire . Ecuador (aces serious unrest QUITO, ECUADOR (AP) - President Osvaldo Hurtado declared a state of emergency Wednesday night, banning public protests on the eve of a nationwide strike called by the left-leaning United Federation of Workers. The move came after three days of demonstrations, bus burnings and an attempt to march on the presidential palace ?..r. . i ~ 1 YI A 1- A 1- - A me uiuai sci iuus uin ubi bince nuriauo iooK oiiice two vears ago. Minor street demonstrations were reported near the presidential palace a few hours after the announcement. Police took up positions outside the palace and other public buildings, and soldiers were posted outside public utilities and communications installations. : ,t..i c : * , x wiajr mc tuunu y i? in <x sunt: ux economic war, nuriaao said in announcing the state of emergency on national radio and television. US-Israeli arms sent to Iran BOSTON (AP) - Israel, in coordinaton with the United States "at almost the highest levels," has supplied arms to Iran in its war with Iraq, according to Israeli Ambassador Moshe Arens. In an interview published yesterday in the Boston Globe, Arens said the arms were supplied to Iran after the end of the American hostage crisis with Iran in January 1981. Their aim, he said, "was to see if we could not find some areas of contact with the Iranian military, to bring down" the Ayatollah Ruhollah Khomeini regime. It has been reported widely that Israel had such dealings with Iran, but Arens' remarks apparently were the first official public statement linking the decision to sell arms to Iran in a joint U.S.-Israeli effort to undermine Khomeini, the Globe said. Arens said Khomeini has made no secret of his desire to destroy Israel and recapture Jerusalem for the Moslem world. The Israeli ambassador to the United States called the arms transfers "inconsequential" in terms of the size of the armies involved, and said they involved mostly spare parts for Iran's U.S.-made equipment. Students must huv nnmni iters J r~.?w.w PITTSBURGH (AP) - Hoping to give its students a competitive edge in a computerized world, Carnegie-Mellon University is gearing up to become the first college to require every student to buy a personal computer. By the fall of 1985, the university plans to install more than 7,500 student-bought computers that will be connected to a master computer and can be used alone. "Everybody would agree that America is becoming more and more computerized. We want to give our students an advantage when they leave school." university snnkpsman Don Hale said Monday. The cost of the computer to each student has not been estimated, but Hale said it probably will be less than $1,000. Tuition at Carnegie-Mellon is $6,300 a year. University officials say the widespread placement of computers will significantly alter the students' education. "The computers will enable a student to do other things than the drudge work that goes with putting together a term paper," he said. "It frees students to do other things." For example, students can review a library bibliography in their dorm rooms, edit a paper without retyping it and quickly get through complicated computations, he said. Upon graduation, students could take their terminals home or sell them to an incoming student. Pet bear still eluding captors JACKSON BOKO, S.C. (AF) - Booby the black bear ? Atlanta fable TV magnate TVd Tnrnpr's hi a npt ? pnntinnpc to elude her would-be captors despite a determined chase on foot and in the air. Booby has been roaming free in Charleston County for 10 days now. She's outwitted three policemen, an animal control officer, a veterinarian, the manager and assistant manager of Turner's plantation, the owner of a store here and his son, and at least six other volunteers. Honey buns, molasses, tranquilizer darts, peaches and a tree-cutting power saw have all proven ineffective at luring ~ i ,.U: 1 A 11 ... i ? r . t>uuu,y ui caiuiuug ncr. /\nu ner maie, Yogi, is lonely DacK at the fenced-in pen the couple shared. Booby is not a threat to pets, livestock or people, says Joe Hamilton, an expert on black bears with the South Carolina Department of Wildlife and Marine Resources. "She might knock over a beehive or get into somebody's garden, but she's no real threat," he said. "There's a lot of danger involved for her. She won't go into a trap, and if they drug her, she's liable to fall out of a tree ana break something, or get in the water and drown." Hamilton says there are plenty of acorns, nuts and berries in the wild forxBooby to feed on, and says the best thing to do now to leave it up to her. "S'h !' show up sometime. Wild bears have a tremendous horn.tv tinct, and I assume captive bears do too." lit- > *-d going around here now is that there's only one man wh<- n. bring Booby back alive. n**<*** _ i U w oaay j * RH liim; "On Golden Pond" starring Henry i Fonda and Katharine Hepburn; 2:30 $ 1.00, 7 and J:30 p - $ 1.50. Law-and-ord (AP) - A proposal to restore the death penalty in Massachusetts and a crackdown on bail in three other siaies are among law-ana-oraer Danoi measures voters will be considering on Nov. 2. Arizona, Florida and Illinois ballots feature referenda aimed at making it easier for judges to keep accused criminals in jail while awaiting trial. Florida voters also will consider a u,*? in .,11 Aiir inrl rfno uanui V.JUCOUU11 IU aiiuw juu^co auu juries to consider evidence even if police obtain it illegally. Massachusetts, which has not had an execution since 1947, will vote on whether to restore the death penalty. Even if the referendum is approved, follow-up legislation would still be needed. Michael Fields, spokesman for a coalition of groups opposing the death penalty, said up to $200,000 will be spent on media advertising aimed at defeating the referendum. New Jersey and Rhode Island voters will weigh proposals to build new prisons. Nevada will consider a Melinda Mills takes a break from her i ** * U.S. steel wai BRUSSELS, BELGIUM (AP) - The Community reached agreement yesten steel war with the United States, and said he had "no doubt" the U.S. steel i the policy. Spokesman for several EEC delega many had lifted reservations to a systei steelmakers would voluntarily limit c States. In return, the United States wou duties on European steel imports. West Germany will be allowed to ship of steel to the United States than its E quota system. EEC Trade Commissioner Wilhelm have no doubt" the agreement woulc Keagan adminstration and the U.S. stec Haferkamp said he believed the se major step toward easing tensions betw and its allies in Europe. Nudes on beei TUSTIN, Calif. (AP) - A former sheriff's deputy thinks America's beer drinkers need some cheesecake with their brew, but the state of California can't see bare-bosomed beauties on bottle labels and has banned the sale of Nude Beer. Entrepreneur Bill Boam may also face problems with the federal government, but says truckloads of Nude Beer are already being loaded for delivery to more than a dozen suues mai aon i require Deer label approval, where demand from distributors has been "astronomical. "We have orders for half a million dollars a month," the mustachioed, curly-haired 33-year-old said Tuesday. "People are saying it's a fun, refreshing product. They just can't wait to buv it. The women I've talked to say they would buy the beer for the men." The idea for Nude Beer came to Boam three years ago when lie was going through a divorce.. 'I went inlo a store ai>^ picked up a er issues go measure that would make it more difficult for convicts serving lengthy Innfoc narnlpH OVI11VI1VW -w uv- Jyv.. ~ And while California weighs a gun control proposition, New Hampshire and Nevada vote on state constitutional amendments guaranteeing the right to bear arms. The bail proposals in Arizona, Florida and Illinois are part of a growing trend in the United States to deny bail to defendants who are considered a danger 10 me community if they are released while awaiting trial. Traditionally, courts have said bail must be set at the minumum amount that would reasonably assure the defendant's appearance at trial. Denying bail or requiring a cash bond higher than necessary violates the presumption of innocence, according to traditional rulings. Out of an estimated 11 million arrests in this country each year, only about 80,000 defendants are kept in jail instead of released on bail, according to studies. SIHHiDf " * v-~- -^* j vaM^MK i-c, - -ws- 'wmBmi .!? ^vr F r? : :^ - r ^x-*^r HUH duties as cashier at S.C. Bookstore to show r with Common European Economic For years, the L day on a plan to end a West European e a top EEC executive overloaded U.S. m; 1,1 i l: " uuuauy wuuiu dccepi auctJtrcuiiig u.o. pi barriers to trade, tions said West Ger- Next to the fight m by which European gas from a new tr ixports to the United been one of the m ild not impose penalty countries. more of certain types The EEC countr JEC partners under a the last day that ? possible, since sp Haferkamp said, "I ternational Trade I be accepted by the place by Washingt< ;1 industry. The West Germs 1J I _ t f\ (tlil !/>?) n tI. lUCllICUl WUU1U LKi a v,,c ICIIUJUVC clg 'een the United States be bound by any li tubes to the Uni r labels arouse six-pack of beer and a Playboy magazine, and thought, 'Somebody ought to come out with something great-looking on a bottle of beer.' Being a marketing consultant for a long time, I put it in the works." The full-color label shows a blonde wearing only a smile from the waist up. Boam's WHB Manufacturers Inc. contracted with Haminonton, N.J.based Eastern Breweries to brew and bottle the beer. But he met disap proving eyes when he sent the label to the California Department of Alcohol Beverage Control, known as ABC. In August, ABC regulatory affairs director Manuel Espinosa ruled the label violated state laws prohibiting indecent or obscene liquor ad vertising. Boam and Eastern Rrpworios h?V#? nnnf?;ilor1 ? Mah Xi hearing is scheduled before an administrative law judge. Jeffrey Walsworth, attorney for Boam and Eastern Breweries, said the label "is not indecent or obscene," to voters However, the move toward "preventive detention" has grown as studies show that one of every six people out on bail is arrested for a new crime before coming to trial; ' the more seroius the first charge, the more likely the defendant is to commit violence while out on bail. Thirty states now allow judges making bail decisions to also consider whether the defendant is dangerous and might commit crimes of violence if released, according to the Pretrial Services Research Center in Washington. I Arizona Attorney General Bob Corbin said the proposal there "would allow judges to take into account the danger posed by the defendant on bail before trial. Too many people are released before trial simply because they have enough money to post bail." I The American Civil Liberties Union opposes the ballot questions. ( W3^ -- -fJ-^f I- - r_,^fe^- -T_ >;' ^ gp; ^., A ffig& I ' >^M US.'f -r--''; :^w''9 j off heF friend Siim. i Market ends fnited States has been complaining about ;xports of subsidized steel to already arkets, while the Europeans have accused residential administrations of putting up over West European purchases of Soviet ans-Siberian pipeline, the steel issue has ost divisive struggles between the allied ies overcame West German opposition on in agreement with the United States was >ecial tariffs nA it e i? iimuuMWU KfJ IIIU U ,U. I" Commission were scheduled to be put in >n at the end of the day. in Cabinet had given conditional approval reement Wednesday but said it would not mitations on shipments of steel pipes and ited States. controversy o ?-> r\ 1 1 ,*v .*1 A I? ? - A A - * - - aim caueu me siaie law unconstitutional because it limits freedom of expression and is overly vague or ambiguous. "What he (Espinosa) is trying to do is regulate morals rather than alcohol," Walsworth contended. Boam said he will take the case to the U.S. Supreme Court if necessary. Meanwhile, Boam said he is i preparing to fill orders in Alabama, I Arkansas, Colorado, Kentucky, Maryland, Mississippi, Nebraska, 1 Nevada, New Mexico, Oklahoma, Pennsylvania, Tennessee, West Virginia and Wvomine ? states that he says don't care what's on a beer label as long as there's beer in the bottle. His plans include changing the girl on the label every month and introducing male nudes. I> !J t l ?' " ouctm sain ne nasn i tounci anyone who objects to the labels, noting that the carboard six-pack package doesn't have a nude and conceals the naked busts on the bottle labels.