4A SO/ P-A- INTEREST IAiO yO ON 14 DAY MONEY $ No. 1 for IBM Compatible Software , [j r i H Trainin g. Hands-on IBM No. 1 for l 0 Back-up, Sales jaj j -g- .A ® No. 1 for Afte r Paid on £100 upwa rds held at 14 days notice. Credit Finance Bank 12/13 South William Street. Dublin 2. Tel. 777046 and Branch es. Smurfit Computing Ltd Swords Rd, Dublin 9. Tel: (01) 426222. European bod y bans En glish clubs indefinitel y 500 held at Eng lish festival From Conor O'Cler y, at Stonehenge POLICE arrested more than 50O people on Saturday evening after violent clashes with peace campers and travelle rs trying to get to Stonehenge for a MidSummer festival. Special courts sat in Wiltshire yesterday to deal with dozens of charges of assault and possession of drugs. Bail was given in most cases with the conditio n that those charged stay more th an 25 miles from Stonehenge. A few campers retu rned yesterday to the field some miles from Police confront alternative society; photogra ph: page 5. Stonehenge where their 140 vehicles were parked , but police would not aHow them through the gates. Ten more arrests were made for obstructi on , mostly when attempts were made to get through the hedges , but there was no serious trouble up to late yesterd ay evening. The festival had been banned after damage was caused in previ ous years to some of the archaeological rem ains around Stone henge , and nearby trees had been cut down for firewood. A High Court injuncti on had been obtained by the National Trust and local farmers. The convoy, several miles long, was stopped when it reached the A 303 which crosses Salisbury Plain near Stonehenge six miles away. Police tipped gravel in the roadway in front of them. The vehicles , mostly gaily paint ed (Continued on page 6)- THE UNION of European Football Associations (UEFA), European soccer's ruling body, in an unprecedented move, yesterday banned English soccer clubs indefinitely from European competition. The ban follows the rioting at last Wednesday's European Cup final in Brussels , in w hich 38 people died and 454 were injured. UEFA ,. which announced the decision afte r its executive committee met for two hours and 40 minutes in Basle, Switzerland , said it Would decide later ' whether England' s national team would be allowed to compete - in the European champ ionshi p. .The ban applies to all English dubs com- . peting in the European Champ ionsCup, the UEFA and Cup Winners ' Cup. The full text of the UEFA executive committee 's statement is: "The executive committee of UEFA met in Basle on Sunday , 2 June, 1985, following the tragedy which occurred on. the occasion of the final (match) Liverpool FC vs Juvenrus Turino in Brussels and decided as follows: "1. UEFA will not accept any entries 'from English clubs for the UEFA Cup competitions , and this for an indeterminate period of time. "2. As regards the case of Liverpool FC, as a result of the tragedy in Brussels, the documents , of the case will be submitted to the control and disciplinary committee for specific sanctions. "3. As regards ' the future , new Bruce Springsteen playing at Slane on Saturday. — (Photograph : Matt Kavanag h; more pictures: . measures wul be taken-in order -to 7) , page reinforce the security in the stadia and the surroundings of the stadia. "4. As regards the partici pation of the English national team in the next European football champ ionship, a decision will be taken at a later stage. " It was one of those days when blasted out over the countryside. There were lots of young While UEFA has banned indigetting there was almost as much The walkers started to run and Haugheys. vidual teams in the past for run as being there. The traff ic jam their chorus passed on down the There were 200 VIP passholders rowdiness by fans , it has never started at Ardee , Drogheda and road "Bom in the Ro-tunda!" from RTE. banned an entire national Navan. At Navan , two young men There was a young man related It was so hot and the sky was association '. travelled happily on the bonne t of by marriage to the Castle so blue , the band was so good and Last Friday the English FA mana gement , who passed on a a red car , drinking beer. As the so loud , Mr Springsteen was so voluntarily withdrew its profescrawl slowed to a standstill , the long fist of minor luminaries of the cheerful and so funny and so sional teams from European comdriver got out and joined them. Dublin business world , and added energetic that they would have petition for one year. Four young girls scored ten out ' permitted him anything. Even in a couple of bloodstock breeders On the same day Belgium imaddressing them as "Ladies and posed an indefin ite ban on all Slane resounds to the real thing; Concert held without . Gentlemen ,' ¦all you Irish people British teams , from schoolboys to ' : out there " . . incident: page 7. professi onals, including those from They were the first Irish Scotland , ' Wales ' and Northern the first stop on the audience , Ireland. of ten for chic, for a leftfrom Sligo, a really super couple. European tour and the biggest hand-drive, 2CV with French UEFA had originally scheduled He added anxiously: "These ' are 'd ever played to, he audience he plates. A local scored equally the executive committee meeting all on-the-level people. I'm not "Do you love me?" he told them. "bullshit , super highly for memorability with his for July 2nd , but moved it up a giving you any month after the English and Belreeking lorryload of manure. Two demanded. "Yeah!" roared , even people. the champagne set. gian announcements. There was Lord Mountcharles 's more girls in a car with a prayer and a madonna dangling from the father , back from tax exile, lying The absence of English clubs He ended by stampeding into a mirror sat drinking Martinis , version of "Twist and Shout" that happily in the grass oblivious to next season has left four vacancies rapping their plastic beakers to the music , and his wife, Daphne, in the UEFA cup . through the left Monica Barnes sighing: pro ve they had ice. at her Erst rock concert , murmurabsence of Liverpool , Tottenham "That 's communic ation. I mean , ing, "Whatever Henry does, one H otspur, Southampton and Outside Fitzsimons Fun eral what are politicians really , comgets thrown in at the deep end" . Norwich City. Directors and Licensed Vintners , pared to that? And the lyrics' even There were 65,000, 75,000 or UEFA's' secretary-general , Mr a lone piper played the "Rose of mean something if you listen to 100,000 people, depending on who Hans Bangertner , said that .four Tralee " to three couples waltzing them. " you listened to, all oh first-name countries ' who would normall y in the gutter. At the Sports Den a After the message from the terms with Mr Springsteen. have had only two qualifiers will man hopped out of the -car , rushed gardai to thank the crowd for There were lots of people who instead be able .to enter three. in and came out in immaculate behaving itself so immaculately, never heard of Mr Springsteen , white tennis shorts , his denims Liverpool' s chairma n and the last word came over the the very and who never moved outside the new Sports Council chairma n , Mr rolled under his arm , and hopped public address system from propay bar in the hall of the Castle , back ' into the car which had John Smith , welcomed the UEFA moter Jim Aiken: "Youse have or the free bars in .the rooms off ban. "I think it is a very moved only another five yards. . been absolutely wonderful" it , where the five-foot-thick walls statesmanlike decision. This puts a Down the road , just where the was not quite but almost one helped a lot to keep that awful lot of pressure — and rightly so — £1 car park fields turned : into £2 of Itthose days when going home noise out. on English clubs to put their a house had put car park fields, was almost as much fun as being But there was no sign of a houses in order as soon as posout a handpainted notice on the there too , as comparedCardinal. The usually reliable sible so that they can be rehab ilifront gravel. "Reserved for friends the-sunburn contests began in ' tated in Europe. " source of the rumour was said to — but have a good day! " every pub within a ten-mile radius be Father Brian D'Arcy, but The English FA secretary, Mr The road was still lined with ' of Slane , the proverbial peaceful Father Brian looked up in great Ted Croker. said: "English fans walkers when "Born in the USA" Meath village once again. interest and said , "Really?" P. J. Mara toasts the other Boss By Maev Kennedy EVERY year there 's a Slane concert rumour. This year it was that somewhere down among the plastic cider flagons and the naked bodies , or up among the champagne bottles in the chicken-run around the castle , come to hear a good Catholic boy sing, there was Cardinal O Fiaich. True , he was not to be seen. Pete Townsend was there. P J Mara , immortalised by being mentioned in the same bre ath ' on Radio 2, was there drinking champagne from a plastic pint glass. Enc Clapton was there. Famous Seamus Healy , reincarnated as a fascinating strawberry blonde , was there , despite a boiled-out radiator. "If the karma 's right , you'll get the gig," as he so quota bly put it. There was a ridiculously overdressed 19th-century rabbi sprawled in the grass , but he was alleged to be Elvis Costello, with an attraction sprawled beside him. There was a former Lord Mayor of Dublin, resplendent enough to cause dropped jaws all round. Not , as you might think , ALexis FitzGerald , but Michael Keating, In tight , white trousers , lemon Tshirt , white , sleeveless jerkin , lemon socks and white leather shoes. There was Dick Bur ke , turning back his lapel to reveal a "Vote Liam Skelly" sticker. There was Liam Skelly, wondering when he would be called on to vote Dick Burke. Crime linked to family decline Sanctions move on SA expected The Speaker of the US House of Representatives , Mr Tip O'Neill , has predicted that the House will tomorrow pass a Bill calling for economic sanctions against South Africa: page 5. Top-level talks on Tamil crisis The Indian Prime Minister , Mr Rajiv Gandhi , and the President of Sri Lanka , Mr J. R. Jayawardene , began two days of talks in New Delhi , yesterda y, on the Tamil separ atist crisis and , with President Ershad of Bangladesh , visited cyclonedevastated areas: page 5. Getting into the swing of things at the Slane concert on Saturday. — (Photograph : Matt Kavanagh) in North America Ha ppy end to priest 's famil y vigil Over 85 people were killed and hundreds left homeless when, the most destructive tornado since 1854 struck several nor theastern states in the US and parts of Canada: page 5. THE MOTHER of t he missing missionary priest , t he Rev John Kings ton , t old yest erday Jurists urge stand A major conference of international jurists in Paris has said the Government must push for self-determination for the whole of Ireland: page 6. TV TONIGHT There 's comedy on RTE 1 in the form of a "Dermot Morg an Special" at 10.10 p.m. A screen versio n of Graham Gre ene 's "Doctor Fischer of Geneva '" starts at 8.10 p.m. on RTE 2. Full TV and radi o guide in page 15. Italy orders second autopsy on soccer dead; Belgium seeks extradition: page 5. Merseyside police yesterday set up a special board of inquiry into Wednesday 's violence in a bid to track down the guilty fans. The inquiry team will liase with their Belgian counterparts in the investigation. Two Liverpool fans were being held for their own safety at a city police station yesterday after a newspaper claimed they had confessed to leading the charge that ended in the 38 deaths last Wednesda y. The two have claimed they had been misrepresented by the Sunda y People which published their "stor y" under the headline , "We led soccer death charge. " — (PA , Reuter , UPI) British Army denies role in oil spill A BRITISH ARMY spokesman in t hat five British soldiers had Belfast last night denied soldiers crossed the Border at 11 a.m. on were involved in a cross-Bo rder Friday and had been turned back incident which has left Dundalk by a joint Army-Garda patrol , for without water supplies people • which had been sent to the area hts and with the the past two nig when a complaint had been made possibility of further water rationby local people. ing this week. Reports from local people on Although the Army accepte d Friday had said that 60 British that a patrol did cross the Border soldiers had crossed the Border . oh Friday near Hackballscross and The British soldiers had told the returned when the err or was gardai that they had str ayed pointed out to it , a spokesman across the Border because of a said its inquiries had found map-reading error , the Govern"nothing .to suggest that soldiers ment spoKesman said. They were responsible for the leaking of- immediately returned to Northern diesel fuel oil". Ireland. The leaking of oil — estimated At 12.31 p.m. the gardai had , at 9,000 gallons — into Courtb ane been told of a diesel oil escape River was noticed a short time and the removal of a valve from after the patrol withdrew. Because an oil storage tank which had the river feeds Dundalk reser voir, caused pollution of the river. the taking of water from the river Confirming that water was again was suspended until last night. being pumped from the river , a The Department of For eign council spokesman said last night Affairs has lodged an official com- that they were satisfied that the ' plaint with the British Government weekend burning of the bog, into over the incursion. which most of the diesel had A statement from the Departseeped , had prevented major on ment also said yesterday that pollution. the instructions of the Taoisea ch, "However , there may still be the Department Dr FitzGerald , restrictions on use on Monday and had requested the full co-operation perhaps for another few days as of the British authorities in . the our reservoir is virtually dry. " investigation of the oil spill and Althoug h gardai in Dundalk are had been "given an assurance that investigating the spillage , no witthis will be forthcoming ". nesses td the actual opening of the A Government spokesm an said valve have come forward. Socialists take strong lead in Greek election GREECE'S ruling Pan-Hel lenic Socialist Party (PASOK), headed by the Prime Min ister , Mr Andreas Papandreou , was leading with 46.78 per cent of the 7.5 million votes in yesterda y 's general election , the Interior Ministry announced in Athens early, today after results from nearly one-fourth of the country 's 14,738 polling stations were counted. The main conservative opposition New Democracy Party (NDP) had 39.88 per cent of the vote ; the Pro-Soviet Communists 10.07 and the Communist Party of the Interior 1.80, the ministry added. In the previous election in 1981 PASOK got 48.07 per cent , the of her deligh t on hearing on Sat urday t hat he was alive and being cared for by Angolan rebels. Mrs Bridie Kingston had been t old last Monday t hat her son had been killed with a French colleague. An emotional week for the Kingston family, who live at Clogheen House, Clonakilty, Co Cork , began on Monday when their parish priest , Monsignor Michael Daly, came to their home and told them that Father Kingston, who has been in Angola for eight years , had been killed. "It was an awful experience and we were shattered. Tne House in Dublin confirmed the news, but later in the afternoon we were told there might be a ray of hope ," Mrs Kingston said . "On Tuesday our hopes faded again when Father John 's friend . Father Jean Wozniak , was found dead and there was no word of John at all. "We were giving up hope when on Saturday we were told by the Provincial in Dublin that John was alive but wounded. It was the difference between life and death , and although we are still very worried , we are thankful to God that he is alive," she said. Yesterday, for the first time in a week , the family — there are seven altogether — went for a relaxing walk on a nearb y beach with John 's father , Samuel. They had been waiting by the phone round the clock for further news of their son , who was prayed for at all Masses in the area yesterday. Father Kingston and Father Wozniak had sought refuge in Malange in April when the mission at Kiwava Nzaji came under threat of rebel attack. • The mission — according to a Holy Ghost Order spokesman in Lisbon — was attacked by UNITA on May 19th and it was as the two priests were returning to it eight days after the attack , t h at they were ambushed. A UNITA spokesman in Lisbon said on Saturday that Father Kingston was in a "satisfactory " condition and would be released as soon as "he was well enough to be put free. " Asked why Father Kingston was being detained , the spokesman said that he was under medical assistance " and had been taken from the scene of the ambush by UNITA members. He said that the priests had been travelling with a military unfortunately the convoy and guerrillas had lost control of the situation and a French priest had been killed. " He gave no details of Father Kingston 's wounds but described him as being "quite well." Five priests of the Holy Ghost Fathers have been killed or have disappeared and more than 50 missionar y workers have been killed or kidnapped , since UNITA began its campaign to overthrow the Marxist government after independence from Portugal in 1976^ NDP 35.87, the pro-Soviet Communists 10.93 and the Interior Communists 1.34. - Computer predictions based on the alread y counted votes showed PASOK winning 161 seats in the 300-seat Parliament , New Democracy 126 seats, the pro- Soviet Communists 12 seats and the Interior Communists one seat. The Interior Minister , Mr Yannis Marcopoulos , said voting had taken place without incidents. Police banned traffic from central Athens in an effort to maintain calm once the election results became known. But supporters of PASOK and the NDP clogged the streets , of the - northern city of Thessalonika, honking their car horns and waving then - party flags in expectation of the results. Crowds . also gathered at the various polling stations in Athens and Thessalonika where Presi dent Christos S a r t z e t a k i s , Mr Papandreou , the former President , Mr Constantine Karam anlis , the New Democracy leader , Mr Constantine Mitsotakis cast their votes. New Democracy blames PASOK for Greece 's strained relations with its NATO allies and accuses Mr Papandreou of undermining Greek security by planning The results of a school survey show a disturbingly high level of drinkin g among teenage girls, writes Mary Maher in the first of a three part series: page 11. Emphatic win for Ireland THE Republic of Ireland soccer team emerged from a period of mediocrity to score an emphatic 3-0 victory over Switzerland in a World Cup (group , six) qualifying match at Lansdowne Road, yesterday. Irish captain Frank Stapleton, without an international goal for almost 18 months , sent his side on the path to victory when he scored after seven minutes and 26 minutes later a glancing header by Tony Grea lish established a 2-0 half-time advantage. A well-taken solo : effort by Kevin Sheedy secured Ireland' s victory, which puts them on top of their grou p. Meanwhile , Ireland' s rug by team maintained its 100 per cent tour record with a hard-foug ht 33-15 win over Japan in thesecond Test in Tokyo, yesterday. Cavan referee - Michael Greenan was attacked by an angr y mob after Deny had beaten Tyrone , the Ulster senior football champions , in the first-round game at Ballinascreen yesterday. In Leinster Meath beat Kildare by 0-13 to 0-7 at Navan and in the Connach t championship Sligo and - Leitrim drew at Sligo and Roscommon beat London at Ruislip. . • A filly sired by the champion racehorse Shergar won a race at the Phoenix Park on Saturday. Shergar , stolen in 1983, is presumed dead. The fill y, Sherkraine , became the first of his progeny to win a race when taking the Patrick Robinson Two-year-old Maiden. Sport: pages 2, 3, 4 and 13. Ballymena man gets new heart An 18-ygar- old Ballymena youth yesterda y had a heart transplant at Papworth Hospital in London. Alan Wylie of Shanleive , Co Antrim,, had been.a patient at the Royal Victoria Hospital , in Belfast for several months. . Mr Wylie is the second Northern Ireland patient to have been given a transplant at Papworth. In February, 27-year-old Patrick Hamill of Dungannon received a new heart. He is ¦ said to be -• ¦progressing well. • Man shot dead in Belfast to dismantle four US militar y bases and other US military installations in the countr y by 1988. The opposition has also severely criticised the Socialist Government' s economic performance. Mr Karamanli s, - whose resignation precipitate d the early election , announced yesterd ay he had withdrawn from active Greek poli(AFP, UPI, tics for good. Times Service) A BELFAST man was shot dead at the entrance to a block of flats in a predominantly Protestant area of the city early on Saturday. Mr Roy McAlpine (24), of Malfin Court , had no connection with the. security forces and the RUC says it has not established any motive for the killing. Mr McAlpine had just returned to Annadale Flats with a woman friend at around 1.20 a.m. when a gunman shot him several times. He was .dead on ,. arrival _._at hospital. Save as you earn Mr Andreas Papandreou, the PASOK leader and Prime Minister , claimed victory when his par ty had won 4 6 per cent of the poll with 42 per- cent of the votes counted. — (Reuter). THE Archbishop of Dublin , Dr McNamara , yesterday linked the weakness in family life to the spread of crime: page 8. Torn ado kills 85 are on probation from now on. The ban could be one or 10 years. I don 't want to see English' clubs in Europe until their fans behave. " Teenage girls 9 drink problem Save as youearn with the Irish Permanent's Group Savings Scheme. By lodging a sum regularly through your company, your savings will grow without any effort. Pick up a brochure from your nearest office. At Irish Permanent we've got it all for you. Assets exceed ^SsSSSS i Holiday arrangements Our business hours today are as follows: The despatch office in Fleet Street will be open until 11 a.m. The front office at 15 D'Olier Street will remain closed all day. The classified advertisement department will operate from 9 a.m. to 12.30 and 1.30 p.m. to 3 p.m. (telephone ¦ 717191). Outside of these hours urgent notices may be handed hi at the Fleet Street entrance between 6 p.m. and 9 p.m. Normal working hours resume tomorrow. _ Irish _ Permanen t The People's Choice