The Battalion. (College Station, Tex.) 1893-current, February 20, 1980, Image 8

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    ige 8 THE BATTALION
WEDNESDAY, FEBRUARY 20, 1980
Vord ‘no-fault’ divorce trial
tarts before packed court
United Press International
DETROIT — The long-awaited divorce trial of automotive magnate
Henry Ford II and his estranged wife, Cristina, began in Wayne
County Circuit Court Tuesday, the 15th anniversary of their marriage.
The trial was delayed for 45 minutes because of the late arrival of
Mrs. Ford and her attorney.
“She was late for her marriage, she’s late for her divorce,” quipped
Ford’s attorney, Milton J. Miller.
About 100 people, including dozens of reporters and society watch
ers, packed a courtroom designed to hold only 60. Ford, seeking to
avoid reporters, slipped in through a side door.
“I have nothing to say,” Ford said before proceedings got under way
before Judge John R. Kirwan.
Neither side is contesting the divorce under Michigan’s no-fault
divorce law. Miller said the trial has just one purpose — “money.”
“This is not the way we prefer to adjudicate divorce cases,” Miller
said of the intense publicity surrounding the trial.
Some of the best-known names in Detroit society are on the list of
potential witnesses.
ALTERATIONS
IN THE GRAND TRADITION OF
OLD TEXAS WHERE MOTHER
TAUGHT DAUGHTER THE FINE
ART OF SEWING SO HELEN
MARIE TAUGHT EDITH MARIE
THE SECRETS OF SEWING AND
ALTERATIONS
DON'T GIVE UP — WELL
MAKE IT FIT!"
AT WELCH'S CLEANERS WE NOT
ONLY SERVE AS AN EXCELLENT
DRY CLEANERS BUT WE SPE
CIALIZE IN ALTERING HARD TO
FIT EVENING DRESSES. TARfeRED
SHIRTS, JEAN HEMS. WATCH
POCKETS, ETC
(WE RE JUST A FEW
BLOCKS NORTH OF FED
MART.)
WELCH’S CLEANERS
3819 E. 29th (TOWN & COUNTRY SHOPPING CENTER)
ALPHA
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ZETA
SCHOLARSHIPS!!!
ALPHA ZETA MEMBERSHIP NOT RE
QUIRED
REQUIREMENTS:
1) ENROLLED IN COLLEGE OF AGRICULTURE
2) FRESHMAN, SOPHOMORE, OR JUNIOR CLASSIFI
CATION
APPLICATIONS:
AVAILABLE AT DR. MILFORD’S OFFICE
ROOM 217 SOIL & CROP SCIENCE AND ENTOMOLO-
GY BLDG DEADLINE
FEBRUARY 29, 1980
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SCH
Pinto design ‘as good or better
than other cars. Ford official
United Press International
WINAMAC, Ind. — Ford Vice
President Harold Macodonald, tes
tifying in the Ford Pinto trial, called
the Pinto at least as good a car as the
average auto on the nation’s high
ways. He included the placement of
the Pinto’s gas tank in his analysis.
MacDonald said his father fell
asleep at the wheel of his Model A
Ford in 1932 and burned to death
when it hit a tree and caught fire.
“This is one of the reasons I had
great personal concern about the
placement of the fuel tank in the
1973 Pinto,” MacDonald said Mon
day at the opening of the sixth week
of testimony in Ford’s reckless homi
cide trial.
The company is charged in the
deaths of three young women whose
1973 Pinto caught fire following a
rear-end collision.
MacDonald, who called himself
“senior officer responsible for the
car,” cited federal statistics he said
showed the Pinto “was as good or
better than the average car on the
road.”
He said U.S. figures for 1975-76
showed 673 fatal auto accident in
volving fire, of which 13 involved
Pintos. At the time there were 96
million cars in opration, of which
1,850,000 were Pintos.
MacDonald said he was unaware
of another set of federal statistics
showing the 1973 Pinto had twice the
fire deaths of other cars involved in
rear-end collisions. Prosecutor
Michael Cosentino said it was on the
basis of these statistics that the Na
tional Highway Traffic Safety Admi
nistration advised Ford to recall the
Pinto to strengthen its fuel system.
“I am not familiar with those statis
tics,” MacDonald replied to each of a
series of questions in which Cosenti
no cited figures from the study.
Judge Harold Staffeldt ordered
jurors to disregard the questions.
Cosentino told reporters the jury
had heard his figures, and he hoped
they would remember them.
MacDonald, now a vice presdent
in charge of engineering and re
search, was chief engineer for Ford
passenger cars from 1965 to 1975. He
said he not only was in charge of the
1973 Pinto, but he and his son both
owned and drove them.
MacDonald said in rear end colli
sions, the higher the fuel tank, the
more easily it is punctured. He said
that’s why he feels the 1973 Pinto
tank, below the floorboards and be
hind the axle, was safer than tank in
the 1973 Toyota Corolla and British-
made Ford Capri which were above
the axle directly behind the rear
seat.
Unii
I “I feel fi
conib, 49,
J “And I i
That’s s
0 ver a yeai
jnedical d
jjeys of the
stopped w
His bod
nous was!
as throv
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‘point to f
Iterrifici
lous feats
: You mi
f vvas savec
^Others in
n ey failu
cleansed
other day
to an arti
. Wrong
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\
I
Battalion Classifieds
Call 845-2611
Nimitz center
seeks funding
BEFORE
THE BALL.
Tuxedo and Shirt
Rental and
Sales
formals
111 College
Main
846-1021
846-4116
United Press International
FREDERICKSBURG —The late
Fleet Admiral Chester Nimitz com
manded the largest naval force ever
assembled, but he is most admired,
and perhaps best known, in the na
tion he helped defeat.
Thousands of ships and aircraft
and 2,063,311 men and women
served under the quiet Texas in the
Pacific, but officials of the Admiral
Nimitz Center say he has not been
afforded the honors he deserved in
the United States mainly because he
was not as flamboyant as a George
Patton or a William Halsey.
President Franklin D. Roosevelt
bypassed 28 Admirals senior to him
and personally selected Nimitz, a
student of early 20th Century
Japanese Admiral Heihachiro Togo,
to take command of the Pacific Fleet
which had been broken by the attack
on Pearl Harbor.
Ur
f; WASP
ment-sp
eluded th
ing a tir
material i
when cor
lives the)
| The re
i troduced
be the bt
combine:
photoelei
$30.
I Smoke
Eisenhower already have beei; ^ earn 'Jf
honored, “but because of his muk models —
nature Admiral Nimitz has bem use a
overlooked hero, little knownev; j c i um 24
in his own country,” said D.H.l: j n th e aj,
bard, director of a campaign to® Tests
funds to convert the old Steamk un it s are
Hotel into a memorial to Nimita or s l 0 w-l
all those who served in his
mand.
So modest was Nimitz—histe
rapher called it “oh essive te
tion” — that he insisted befoul:
death in 1966 that the local itito
which bears his name be defc
not to him but to all who serveki!
him.
The landmark Steamship Hsft
once owned by Nimitz’ grandfe.
is where the famous admiral to»te
first steps as a child and now si
being converted to a “museumolV
Pacific W ar” in his honor.'
tion devi
in fast-bv
The re
lear Regi
ence Ap
Calif., fo
on the a'
sumers ti
ionizatio
The st
St
3rd Annual
illbilly" c Hoe^Down
dance featuring
square
‘Manning
Smith
From the battered remnants ot
Pearl Harbor Nimitz’ command
grew into the greatest naval armada
in history and it eventually defeated
the Japanese Navy and led to Amer
ica’s victory in World War II.
As commander-in-chief in the
Pacific, Nimitz headed all American
and allied military forces — Navy,
Army, Coast Guard, Air Force,
Marines — operating in the world’s
largest ocean.
Officials of the Admird Ni»
Center have raised about 1200,fl
for the project through variius lw
functions and benefit dinner,infc|
las and Houston, but Hubbards!’:
$400,000 more is needed ancm> :
raising may delay completion^
hotel renovation, tentatively^
duled to be completed in aboil®
year.
qi
i
WAS
versity <
port pro
a vaccir
bacteria
and rhe
The
THURSDAY,
C FEBRUARY
21
7 p.m.
225 GMSC
$1 FOR Y MEMERS; $1.50 FOR NON-MEMBERS
‘V’all Come!
C-/41ways something for you in the
Y
In Japan, Nimitz is numbered
among the three most admired
admirals, along with Togo and Bri
tain’s Lord Nelson, but he is the last
of the great U.S. World War II lead
ers to be honored at home with a
museum or memorial.
Generals Douglas MacArthur,
George Marshall and Dwight
Nimitz’ lack of publicity mi(
one reason why fundraising isR whether
so slow, Hubbard indicated. these d«
“The thing is he was so darn®- antibioti
est that it made him back awayfe, Rheu
the limelight,” Hubbard said. ■ theresu
that reason a lot of kids in FredeS 0 f t h e ^
sburg don’t know who Nimitz'*
Yet you talk about the Alamo—^
don’t belittle the Alamo many*
— but you had a couple ofhundn
guys there and,
knows about them
gee,
everyth
REVIVAL
FEBRUARY 20-24
SUNDAY
10:45 am & 6:00 pm
WEDNESDAY — FRIDAY
7:00 pm
EVANGELIST
DAVID ROEVER
COLLEGE HEIGHTS
ASSEMBLY OF GOD
4100 OLD COLLEGE RD. BRYAN, TEXAS
Evangelist Roever, burned beyond recognition or hope of survival in the Vietnam war,
attributes his remarkable recovery “entirely to a miracle-working God.”
Come and hear his testimony and enjoy the singing and see what God can do for YOU.
Nursery will be provided each service.
EVERYONE IS WELCOME
researcl
strep t
rheuma
ment. B
fever d<
ease.
The
rheuma
heart va
Imuscle
’ As la
theart di
lof death
‘During
jthousan
togeth*
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