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Publication: European Stars and Stripes Tuesday, May 20, 1986

You are currently viewing page 45 of: European Stars and Stripes Tuesday, May 20, 1986

   European Stars And Stripes (Newspaper) - May 20, 1986, Darmstadt, Hesse                                Inside stripes Penny Power. Page 3 q medical services work together. Page 2 q 86 moving season previewed Page 9 d indy 500 lineup is complated.,Page 21 the stars and stripes vol. 45. No. 33 tuesday May 20, .1986 authorized unofficial publication 4hmeo Forcel ,.T d 8693 a ers Rescue Mia Chesapeake a. A a Norfolk 4 Western rain carrying about 1,000 com Pany employees and their families on an annual Outing derailed sunday injuring at least 135 people seven seriously authorities said. Fourteen cars of the 23-car steam engine rain derailed in a Remote area of the great dismal swamp National wildlife Refuge authorities used helicopters to Rescue the injured. It s eight Miles Down a Railroad track. And no roads to the site said Chesapeake police set William Harrison. All of a sudden she just started rolling said passenger . Lowe who was not injured. Seven seriously injured people were Luken 10 Norfolk general. Hospital where they were being treated for head and Chest injuries said Hospital spokeswoman Debric Myers. Many Are critically injured she Slid. Five were brought in by helicopter and two by am Ulanee. One of the injured is a in year old boy and the rest were adults she said. Because of i he remoteness of the idea see wreck on Page 28 100,000 soviets May be affected by nuke Accident by the associated press As Many no 100,000 soviets will suffer Long term effects of radiation from the chernobyl nuclear Plum Accident that Al ready has killed 13 people an american Bone marrow specialist said sunday in los Angeles. Or. Robert Gale who assisted soviet physicians in performing Bone marrow transplants an radiation victims said 300 soviets had been exposed o Sua Iantia radiation and 11 of ilium have died. Two others were killed at the chernobyl site. The soviets last official report Uncas Salties was issued wednesday when soviet Leader Mikhail Gorbachev Aid nine people had died and 299 were hospitalized wild radiation injuries. Most of this death resulted from skin  or liver damage front Radia Tion. Gale Suid. I think we can say there Are tit least 50.000 to 100,000 people who have Hud some dose of radiation which might be of Long term concern Gale said there will unfortunately be   Gale chairman of the International Bone marrow transplant registry said his Esti mates an Tang term effects were based in pare on information obtained after the world w r skip Lorie bombing of Hiroshima and Nagasaki Japan. Meanwhile West German Chancellor Helmut Kohl has stepped up that country s demands for reparations for damage caused by the nuclear disaster. In an address in Munich to ethnic Ger mans driven from the sudden area of what is now Czechoslovakia Kohl said nuclear Plant safety should be a regular part of the East West dialogue compensation for West German Farmers and dairymen affected by the radiation from tin april 26 Accident has become an extremely sensitive Issue in Germany. Bonn is gearing up to pay Farmers More than $90 million for losses caused by strict food controls brought about by the higher radiation counts. Gorbachev rejected Calls for reparations Ovid said the germans have forgotten their irredeemable debt to the soviet people for the grief caused by German nazism la the  it would have been better if he had left behind slander against us and Given us important information Kohl Salt me said thai Gorbachev first of ail should. Have addressed the question of How the soviet Union plans to compensate for mute rial damages that occurred especially in West  Kohl also stressed the need for greater International cooperation to prevent future nuclear accidents. Indeed the latest events in the soviet Union have made extra Clear that Environ mental Protection no longer can be a National Issue Kohl said. We All must be interested in the closest cooperation in this  Kohl strongly defended Bonn s Pivotal role in the North Atlantic treaty organization a Neutral Germany would very quickly tall into the gravitational Field of the soviet Union he told the crowd in Bonn soviet ambassador Yuli Vii see soviets on Page 28 Welcome Home a Naty flier bags his family it Ocean Nas after returning on sunday from an eight month Lour of he a . The unidentified flier is a member of attack Squadron 55, which attacked Libya last Mouth. Story photo Page 5 striking Twa Tenc fans give up unconditionally new York api the Union for striking Twa flight attendants Suid sunday that workers would unconditionally return to work even if members reject the company s latest coat acl offer in the 9-Weck-old walkout. If inc membership rejects the Twa offer our offer of unconditional return remains and we Wilt continue our at tempts to set tic our Contra Elihaj dispute through any economic and lawful Means except for the withdrawal of our service said Karen lanl7, a vice president of the Soo a Bertn tar Al federation of flight attendants. President Vicki a Ronkovich said in a taped tale wage to the membership sunday that the time and place  s meeting offer would big  Irtle run Moniti made inc offa Jarfas files payt officials said. Saws stairs the Messloh jji3l the Union had offered saturday night to return tits stat before the vote and advised strikers to show up at Worket it airline called. But she said that did not signal an end to the with soul. The Union announcement left airline negotiators unsure of what was happening.  they re returning to work but simultaneously they say they re still on strike said Twa chief negotiator Bill Hoar. I certainly Don t understand it. La perhaps adds More confusion Thun to Clear anything  Lantz said in a Telephone interview that the Union offer see Twa on Page 28  
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