2 Friday, September 4, 1987 / University Daily Kansan Nation/World Attacks continue in Persian Gulf; two killed on Panamanian ship MANAAM, Bahrain — Another convoy of U.S. warships and Kuwaiti tankers steamed south yesterday through the Persian Gulf, where two crewmen on a Panamanian supply ship became the first fatalities of renewed tanker attacks by Iran and Iraq. Iraq said its warplanes raided a tanker, and shipping sources said Iranian speedboat-borne fighters attacked a Japanese tanker and an Italian motorship. Labor turmoil continues in South Korea Fire from Iraqi warplanes or Iranian speedboats have hit at least 20 ships registered in nine different nations since Saturday, gulf-based sources said. They said the number at least doubled the average for a month in 1986. Britain reflagged its first Kuwaiti tanker yesterday off Khor Fakkan port on the Gulf of Oman, shipping sources in the United Arab Emirates said. SEOUL, South Korea — About 13,000 striking workers occupied the nation's largest shipyard yesterday, and some torched cars, destroyed office equipment and attacked a tourist hotel. Hundreds of other strikes continued around the country after one striking shipyard worker was killed and eight of two months of labor turmoil. Striking taxi drivers who reached a pay raise agreement in Seoul returned to work late yesterday, but a strike leader was reported in serious condition after setting himself on fire in a dispute with management. Daewoo, the nation's No. 2 automaker, remained shut down for the ninth day. Attacks by rebels continue in Philippines MANILA, Philippines — Communist rebels vowing to exploit the turmoil stirred by last week's failed coup attempt have killed at least 44 people since the military, the military said yesterday. President Corazon Aquino on Aug. 28. Moslem rebels declared support for soldiers who tried to overthrow Brig. Gen. Alexander Aguirre, Manila area commander, warned of possible terror attacks by the mutineers and told leftists not to go ahead with a planned rally today. Babies born with AIDS often abandoned WORCESTER, Mass. — About one-third of the children born with AIDS are orphaned or abandoned at birth, and some die without leaving the hospital because foster or adoptive parents cannot be found in time, social workers say. People resist taking in a child that is an AIDS victim both because they fear the disease and "These children are born in the hospital, they suffer in the hospital and then they die," said Penny Hewlett, deputy commissioner of the Department of Human Resources in New York City. Coffeville engineer offering free bridge COFFEYVILLE — Available: the 226-foot truss bridge that crosses southeast Kansas bridge, good view, needs work. shes the Verdigris River, although all that's left of it is its two spans. Montgomery County engineer Kurt Booe is offering to give away Boee said he would even throw in about $13,000 in federal money. lated Press Teen pilot's trial continues Soviet prosecutor demands an eight-year sentence The Associated Press MOSCOW - The prosecutor accused Mathias Rust of taking an ego trip when he hedge-hopped his small plane to Red Square, and demanded yesterday that the West German teen-ager be sentenced to eight years in a labor camp. Vladimir Andreyev said the 19-year-old pilot's goal in his daring flight to the Kremlin on May 28 was "cheap popularity" rather than a discussion with Soviet leader Mikhail S. Gorbachev about peace and disar- He asked Judge Robert Tikhomirov to give Rust eight years for violating international flight rules, two years for violating the Soviet border and four years for hooliganism. The terms would be served concurrently. Rust acknowledged his guilt on the first two charges but has contested the charge of hooliganism. The trial began Wednesday and a verdict is expected today Rust and his Soviet lawyer, Vsevolod D. Yakovlev, have an opportunity to address the judge and his two lay assistants. of testimony Wednesday, blushed yesterday under questioning from the judge and prosecutor. Andreyev used the testimony of eight witnesses and an aviation expert to cast doubt on Rust's claim that he was on a peace mission when he took off from Finland and flew across more than 500 miles of Soviet territory to Moscow. Rust, who was poised and spoke calmly during more than five hours "I think this trial showed his real face," he said, looking at the defendant from across the courtroom. "He didn't want to consider the public order that exists. He deliberately committed this crime, and he's a hooligan. "He perhaps thought, 'I am Rust, and I want to land where I want to land,' which was evidence of Rust's hooliganism. Andreve said. The prosecutor said the request for eight years in a labor camp included consideration of the defendant's age. Rust's flight in a single-engine Cessna created headlines around the world and made him a folk hero in West Germany. It embarrassed the military, which used a military shake-up, including dismissal of the air defense forces commander and the forced resignation of Defense Minister Sergei L. Sokolov. Andreyev accused Rust of endangering hundreds of passengers on airliners approaching Moscow's Sheremetyevo International Airport, and said there could have been a dangerous international incident if Soviet forces had shot him down. In testimony Wednesday, Rust said the flight was the "greatest mistake I've made in my life" and apologized it murder for it. He had no言 ill intent. He said he wanted to draw attention to his desire for peace, disarmament and a new world order based on full democracy. The flight was the only way he could capture the imagination of people throughout the world, Rust said. Yesterday, he said he could not remember exactly what he said about his mission when he landed. Prosecution witnesses told the court Rust frightened many people on Red Square when he set the plane to crash. He also sidedered his flight a peace mission. "My first reaction was to duck." policeman Andrei Molokoyedov told the court. He was on duty about 100 yards from the bridge where Rust landed and taxied onto Red Square. U.S. delays call for Iran sanctions Dole says he knows real folks FORT MADISON, Iowa — Bol Dole said this week that his poor Kanas upbringing better qualified a canidate for the presidency than do Vice President George Bush's wealth. "I do think I'm probably more like everyone else in this audience that George Bush," Dole said when asked during an appearance before 35 pele in Fort Madison, Iowa, to outline his dislike for the United States. "We're from small towns, and most of us had to work to get where we are." The Associated Press As a permanent member of the Security Council, the Soviet Union has the power to block the resolution with a veto. WASHINGTON — The Reagan administration yesterday delayed its call for an arms embargo or other sanctions against Iran until U.N. General Javier Duellar Cuellar undertakes a peace mission to Teheran. State Department spokeswoman Phyllis Ollahay had said Tuesday that drafting of a resolution to apply for the appointment of a new ambassador would entail an arms embargo. The Associated Press The administration had given Iran until today to accept the cease-fire ordered July 20 by the U.N. Security Council. Renewal of the war in the Persian Gulf had heightened tensions in the area. Dole grew up in Russell. - should begin next week unless Teheran agreed by today to stop fighting and to negotiate with Iraq. It was understood that the United States had demanded as a condition for its approval that Perez de Cuellar not permit Iran to change the ceasefire resolution. Teheran's chief objection is that the measure did not cite Iraq as the aggressor in the 7-year-old war. Bush's father was Prescott Bush, a U.S. senator from Connecticut. Bush attended preparatory school and Yale University. Redman said he did not know whether Iran's invitation to Perez de Cuellar was a tactical delay or a genuine move to consider accepting the cease-fire. "It's not possible for him to make that kind of evaluation," he said. The decision to approve the mission reflected U.S.-Soviet cooperation, but it was unclear whether Moscow would support sanctions if he did. Ceaulair failed to elicit a positive response from Iranian leaders. Representatives of all 15 Security Council members, including U.S. and Soviet diplomats, were working at the Paris Conference in York on instructions for the mission. But State Department spokesman Charles E. Redman said attempts to punish Iran unless it stopped fighting with Iraq would be delayed until after Perez de Cuellar visits Teheran on Thursday. "I think we've experienced some ups and downs in our lifetimes," Dole said. "Getting where we've gotten wasn't because of any wealth in my family or because I had a powerful father or mother. My parents never finished high school, and they were never interested in politics." He said, "So just from the standpoint of, 'Does Bob Dole know there are real people out there? Has he ever been in contact with somebody who really had a problem?' Has he ever been in contact with somebody who had to go to a food stamp line to get food?" I have." Dole said he was not getting personal with his comments about Bush. Downtown RAPBER SHOP "I think he's a fine person and a good vice president," he said. "I don't have anything but good to say about my colleagues." 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