2 Monday, September 29. 1986 / University Daily Kansan News Briefs South African calm disappears after two more blacks are killed JOHANNESBURG — Black radicals burned two blacks to death in a resurgence of political violence after six days of relative calm in South Africa's stifter-urban ghettoes, authorities said yesterday. for a bureau general The Bureau for information one man was found burned to death in Kwanhobule, a black township near Port Elizabeth, and the other was killed when his brother died on time in Kotiga, outside Johannesburg. The bureau blamed black radicals opposed to white- led rule for Saturday's attacks. The total number of deaths now stands at 315 people killed since June 12 when President Pieter Botha declared a nationwide state-of-emergency rule in a bid to quell the unrest. to open the air. More than 2,300 people, an overwhelming majority of them black, have been killed since a wave of violence over the white-led government's policies of racial separation — apartheid — erupted in September 1984. Saturday's killings were the first reported by the Bureau for information since last Sunday. A black man was burned to death in the sprawling black township of Soweto outside Johannesburg. Also yesterday, in the south coast tribal homeland of Ciskei, a territory regarded by Pretoria as an independent state, officials remained silent about the dramatic feed within the ruling Sebe family. Masked gunmen freed Charles Sebe, the homeland's former security chief and brother of President Lennox Sebe, from a prison Friday where he had served two years of a 12-year sentence on terrorism charges. Rivals clash again in Lebanon BERUT — Pro Syrian militiamen and Lebanese army units to President Amir Gemayel clashed in In southern Lebanon, a bomb exploded near a French U.N. peacekeeping force east of the Port of Tyre, wounding two French soldiers, a U.N. spokesman said. No one claimed responsibility for the attack. the mountains northeast of Beirut yesterday in the second day, of heavy fighting between the rival forces attack. Christian militia sources said the troops used tanks and artillery to open fire on pro-Syrian militiamen trying to break through the frontline defenses. The army troops, who are loyal to Gemayel, a Maronite Christian, pounded the attackers with bombs and shells for 30 minutes and forced them to retreat, sources said. sources said. The army forces made no statement on the attack, the command in two days on defenses of the Christian mountain heartland which stretches from the hills southeast of Beirut more than 25 miles in the north. The Christian sources said none of the army troops were wounded. were souped. The Christian militia, the strongest in east Beirut, exchanged sporadic artillery and rocket exchanges yesterday with pro-Syrian Muslim militias across the Green Line which divides Beirut into its Christian east and Muslim west sectors. and Muslim were wounded Hospital sources said two people were wounded in the shelling in east Beirut and four were injured in the west. Reporters view Soviet test site IN THE GEGELEN HILLS, U.S.S.R. — In an unprecedented break with secrecy, the Soviet Union opened part of its main nuclear weapons test site in central Asia over the weekend for inspection by a group of foreigners. group of bioreactors Soviet, East bloc, Japanese and Western reporters were given a glimpse of shattles tunneled into hillsides where tests had taken place until the Soviet unilateral moratorium on underground nuclear testing 14 months ago. The site is in the Gegelen hills, 90 miles west of Semipalatinsk in the central Asian republic of Kazakhstan. Under a reciprocal agreement reached this summer, Soviet scientists are to establish a similar station near the U.S. testing ground in Nevada, but the Soviet Foreign Ministry said Friday that Washington had not yet granted them visas. Two U.S. scientists have been setting up three stations in Kazakhstan to monitor compliance with the test ban introduced by Soviet leader Mikhail Gorbachev in August 1985. Gen. Arkady Ilyenko, commander of the test zone area, said all tests at the Soviet site were carried out in shafts bored horizontally into the granite, and not dug down into the ground as many Western experts believed. Soviet oncils on the trip that the visit, the first known inspection of a Soviet nuclear test site by Westerners, was arranged to reinforce Moscow's appeals to Washington to join the moratorium. Shooting mars 'No Crime Dav' DETROIT — Mayor Coleman Young said the fatal shooting of a policeman on a day designated as "No Crime Day" underscored the need for a war against the city's rising crime rate. Officer Everett Williams Jr., 33, was shot once in the chest Saturday by a homeowner who mistook him for a burglar "Some say the fact that the officer was killed proves that what we're doing is useless," Young said at a banquet Saturday night. "I say the fact proves that we need to do what we're doing all the more. We should've done it last week." Police said Williams, a 12-year police veteran, and his partner were responding to a reported burglary at the home of Riley Jones. 53, less than an hour before the "No Crime Day" parade began. Jones fired through his front door at the two officers. Jones apparently shot at the officers when he heard footsteps, police said. Charges were pending. The shooting was not the only problem during the city's "No Crime Day." By 5 p.m. Saturday, five people had been shot in Detroit, two of them fatally, including the police officer, and one person was stabbed to death. Three rapes also were reported Car seats may hurt some infants NEW YORK - A new study has found that some premature infants under the age of 6 months suffer breathing problems and a severe loss of oxygen in the blood when placed in automobile restraint seats. She said she still supported the use of car seats for premature babies as a precaution against injury in accidents. The phenomenon did not occur in full-term babies at the same weight, prompting Willett to advise parents not to drive with premature infants more than is necessary. Lynne Willett, a pediatrician at the University of Nebraska Medical Center in Omaha, conducted the study "after hearing so many stories from mothers who said their babies turned blue or fainted when they put them into the seats." Willett monitored 20 infants born prematurely but healthy enough to be sent home. Ten of them also suffered from apnea, a breathing problem that occurred during sleep. Bombs rock Belfast: no one hurt BELFAST. Northern Ireland — A heroic policeman spotted a bomb-laden suitcase outside a pub yesterday, carried it away from a neighborhood populated by elderly people and threw it into a field minutes before it exploded. It was one of three bombing incidents early yesterday in the city. A Marxist offshoot of the outlawed Irish Republican Army claimed responsibility for the attacks. Police said they received a telephone warning that a bomb was placed in a suitcase outside a Protestant-owned pub that had closed earlier in a residential section of Downpatrick, 15 miles east of Belfast. From Kansan wires. THE NEW COFFEEHOUSE 12th & Oread above Yello Sub 841-2310 Wake Up! 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