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Page 17 text:
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Page 16 text:
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ID I il-uw runu ADIOLOGICAL KITSON MATHEMATICS LANGUA nnr I uuuu unumu I UI HGSTAGES EI.EcTnI IITIQASQIIIIIIII CULDQALLIISIRYMECHANIC IEOGRAPHY POLITICAL LECH WALESA A5 EM'CA'- MANAGEMENT PHYSICAL ED LIBYIAN , I , SOUTHWICK I K T O Q OLNEY 3 U O X I I I 'ARENTS DAY HOCKEY SITYSPRING CARNIVAL 'IXESJETRA E'gff3'!filt'5DUGGAN FIADIOLOGICAI. FOX co CHQLQGY BFA DURGINRAIDERS OF T BA BIOLOGY ll0LlxNl, HEALTH ED EL SALVAD STORYWEEDHALL STUDENTQQJNILTQQIN I S Nmmpm VELL SIUIDIEIIQMAN IIII MUSIC 760164 gigfpg, CQAICQRDIA Tl nan. Sl P CHIEFS UNIVERSITY as HCV REPUBLICANS TV WRITERS IIIIIIII I UNIVERSITY WEEK SUVIET 3 3e:IIe:AAL HOSPITAL FINALS PULIC f PAPER IIIIIIIIY I,0I:IIII SANDRA O CQ UNGER STRIKE PARENTS DAYfEh5?A18iIME IELANDPOPE IGI-IN PAUL II INFLA 5 REAGAN 2'ff'9,'if?Ah IT fI?f:LmTHEQ.1RA E
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Page 18 text:
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-IAPPENINGS HAPPENING HAPPENING HAPPE It was the most celebrated wed- ding of our times, as Prince Charles Arthur George took for his lawful wife the Lady Diana Frances Spen- cer in a glorious fanfare of pomp and publicity. The wedding translated into thirty-four languages and was seen around the world. It became the most publicized wedding of all times. Royal invitations were extended to most every prominent personage in the world, with only a very few refus- als. People began gathering along the procession route as much as three days before the wedding. Lady Di, looking very much the bejeweled fairy princess in her resplendent gown, made her appearance on the arm of her father, Earl Spencer. In the presence of literally billions of ,I . t, N . ei onlookers, she became the Princess of Wales and mother-apparent to the new heir to the throne. All in all, it was a pageant of color and happiness as the Prince and Lady Diana made their way back to Buckingham Pal- ace through the cheers of onlookers. In August, the U.S. Air Traffic Controllers launched an illegal fed- eral strike. By the weeks end 5100 of the 13000 strikers were given dis- missal notices by the F.A.A. Five lo- cal union leaders were sent to jail, and federal judges were fining the union up to a million dollars a day for as long as the strike continued. However, air traffic flow continued without too many complications. Military people were assigned, to posts and others were being trained. PATCO was concerned with three issues. They wanted a large wage in- crease, the work week to be reduced from 40.to 32 hours a week, and an earlier retirement age with higher pension benefits. PATCO received little public sym- pathy, being taxpayer-supported with relatively high salaries. The ACLU did support PATCO stating, The right to strike is a fundamental civil liberty and should not be denied 1 V 30 to public employees any more than to public ones. On June 11, the Baseball Player's Union went on strike because of dis- agreements with baseball owners. They wanted more control over their Q :F r 5 Zigi. r 5,1 yi-iff. gp Et, 4 ,ii . .s s - izgiefjlfqif - if,-17'C': X' X I careers. They wanted more say about when they would be traded and how much they were worth. The strike caused the season to be split in two. Many fans lost enthusi- asm because of this, and ticket sales were sluggish. They called it an historic occasion. Arizona's Sandra Day O'Connor, 51, was the first woman to be a Justice of the Supreme Court. She was, she said, a firm advocate of judicial re- straint and a strong believer in the family as the hope of the world and the strength of our country. O'Con- nor indicated support for the death penalty and she thinks for herself that abortion is simply offensive. But, she added, 'Tm over the hill, I'm not going to be pregnant again. It's easy for me to say now. Senator Strom Thurmond, chairman of the Judiciary Committee, arranged a candlelit dinner in her honor. Justice O'Connors swearing-in was Sept. 24, 1981. On august 31, while patroling an open ocean missile exercise over the Mediterranean, two U.S. F-14 Tom- cat fighters intercepted two Soviet built Libyan SU-22 fighters with the intention of escorting the two jets through the missile exercise zone. But, as the F-14s approached the Libyan jets, one of the Libyans fired an air to air missile. Seeing the smoke from the missle, the two U.S. fighters violently broke away, evad- ing the missile and wheeling sharply around to come in behind the Lib- yans. U.S. rules of engagement per- mit pilots to shoot back if fired upon, and each of the F-14s triggered a sin- gle heat seeking sidewinder missile, each scoring a hit on a Libyan plane. The engagement lasted less than one minute. 14 n
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