The Battalion. (College Station, Tex.) 1893-current, September 27, 1979, Image 11

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THE BATTALION Page 11
THURSDAY, SEPTEMBER 27, 1979
National briefs
Town not alerted to nuke s hot ‘burp’
United Press International
RICHMOND, Va. — A mechanical failure, apparently com-
lounded by human error, caused Virginia Electric & Power Co.’s
forth Anna nuclear plant to “burp” radioactive xenon gas into the
itmosphere Wednesday, but local authorities say the company never
ilerted them to the accident.
Nuclear Regulatory Commission and Vepco officials said the re
ease from the No. 1 reactor — the nation’s first known incident since
he March accident at Pennsylvania’s Three Mile Island plant —
ised no public health danger.
The Louisa, Va., reactor, the sole nuclear power generator in
/irginia, immediately shut down. Cold shutdown was set for Tues-
The only residents within a mile radius were plant employees,
ipco said.
The exact amount of xenon gas released was unknown, but NRC
ifficials said it was a “very, very small amount.”
Tt wasn’t a leak, it was more like a burp,’’ said Vepco Senior Vice
'resident W.L. Proffitt. Xenon is a noble gas, which means it doesn’t
ireak down and mix with other gases, and is relatively harmless
for its radioactivity.
Longet settles out of court in slaying suit
ASPEN, Colo. — A $1.3 million lawsuit filed against actress-singer
laudine Longet by the parents of slain professional skier Vladimir
Spider” Sabich has been settled out of court, officials announced
Wednesday.
Attorneys confirmed the settlement was reached, but refused to
liscuss terms. The suit, filed in May 1977, asked for $1 million in
mitive damages, which since have been excluded in wrongful death
ctions under Colorado law.
Longet served 30 days in jail for the shooting of Sabich, which
urred in March 1976 in the $250,000 mountain home the couple
shared for two years.
u
idea ^
bad;
Officers accused
of beating aliens
United Press International
SAN DIEGO — Four U.S. Bor
der Patrolmen have been charged
with slapping, clubbing, punching
and otherwise mistreating Mexicans
who crossed into the United States
illegally, the first such criminal
charges ever brought against border
officers.
Accused were Jeffery Otherson,
31, and Bruce Brown, 33, both with
three years’ experience, and two-
year officers Dirk Dick, 25, and
Daniel Charest, 29.
A federal grand jury Tuesday re
turned a six-count indictment accus
ing the four of a total of 38 overt
acts, including conspiracy to “as
sault, beat, strike, kick and mis
treat” aliens with nightsticks, fists
and their open hands on three sepa
rate occasions in July and August.
One of the officers allegedly told a
trainee, as he punched a Mexican in
the stomach, that "sometimes we
find it necessary to do something
like this because the criminal justice
system doesn’t do anything” about
illegal aliens.
The extent of injury to the aliens
could not be determined because
the agents dumped them on the
Mexican side of the border, officials
said.
In attempts to cover up the
crimes, one agent allegedly
threatened the life of a former bor
der patrol trainee who cooperated in
the investigation. Another accused
agent was charged with perjury in
his testimony before the grand jury.
The agents pleaded innocent at
their arraignment late Tuesday be
fore a U.S. magistrate and were re
leased on bonds of $10,000 each
pending a hearing Oct. 1. They face
prison terms of 7 to 11 years if con
victed.
Jupfnamba
Eddie Dominguez 66
Joe Arciniega 74
BU
ffirruM
If you want the real
thing, not frozen or
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^ The Cow Hop
i:
anine is hero
If 6-person chase
“
refunds, but
lung was dont
\es
ty sui
United Press International
NEW YORK — Ida Joseph is an
st woman and her dog is a hero,
jsides, the $3,500 diamond and
lite gold brooch they found on the
:et wasn’t to her taste,
oseph was walking with her ter-
r, Zero, in Greenwich Village
(esday when a thief came running
— pursued by an antique dealer,
itematkmal lallery owner and his wife, a fire
England -i ttalion chief and his aide and a
nt ofapateni . S { er y bicyclist,
it the insuran§ri<; ver yb 0 cly was shouting, ‘Stop
Sef, Joseph said.
, filed an in® It started at the Grace Galleries
ig damages Broadway when antique dealer
cow gave W (ward Howell showed a diamond
ooch that had belonged to his
half-breed» other to a man who told Howell it
ard, had hist! (minded him of one his mother had
bile and event ^ ne( j
eak through l! H was still touching it when he
more than P wlted,” Howell said,
ability claim, ^Howell gave chase, joined by Mr.
n Yenshalb c iid Mrs. Edward Perry, the owners
d. “Mr. Do^ifthe gallery where eight dealers
dees, while ^display their pieces.
Enter Chief Joseph Riccio and his
e, firefighter Ralph Ruocco, who
inted calf,
ige from (clai
screens.’
were driving down Broadway.
Riccio said he saw Howell chasing
the man, yelling “He’s a thief.”
Siren blaring, Riccio and Ruocco
gave chase.
A mystery man on a bicycle then
joined what Howell called the
“Keystone Kops-type chase.”
Pedaling after the suspect, the
bicyclist, who later disappeared,
pointed the way for the fire chief
and his aide.
Joseph was watching the commo
tion when “Zero picked up a thing
in his mouth and I thought, oh God,
he’s going to give me another vet
bill.
“It was a pin and I thought it was
tacky looking,” she said of her pet’s
find.
Meanwhile, Riccio tackled the
suspect, identified as Kenneth
McCabe, 26, of Jersey City, N.J. “I
then saw everyone run back and
start looking frantically,’ Joseph
said. “I held out my hand and said,
Ts this what you’re looking for?”’
“Oh my God, that’s it,” Howell
shouted upon seeing the $3,500
brooch.
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Frisbee
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Fly Fishing
Social & Recreational
Dance
CPR
Study of Revelations
Human Sexuality
Powder Puff Mechanics
Mexico: History from
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Disco
Recreational Folkdance
Beg. Banjo
Home Winemaking
How to Cope with the
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Amateur Radio
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Basic Course in
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