ational/World 19 Cubans jailed after hospital riot United Press International WASHINGTON — Nineteen Cuban refugees, labeled as hard-core troublemakers for their part in two days of rioting at a Washington mental hospital, are headed for a federal prison in Springfield, Mo. Immigration and Naturalization Service officers bused the 17 Cuban men and two Cuban women to Andrews Air Force Base and herded them onto an Air Force plane Monday night after restoring order at St. Elizabeth’s Hospital. About 70 other Cuban refugees remained behind at the hospital for additional psychiatric evaluation. A group of about 90 Cubans who seized the hospital’s “B” ward left the building peacefully after a task force of 300 district police, federal officers and mental health authorities persuaded them to surrender earlier Monday. Sunday, the refugees went on a rampage, throwing furniture, set ting fires and breaking windows. After an uneasy night, trouble con tinued Monday and hospital staff members evacuated the building at about noon when refugees threatened them with makeshift weapons. “I feel relieved it was settled without violence. Some were very cooperative. Some were retarded and some were very frightened,” said Dr. Larry Silver, a psychiatrist for the federal public health service, who helped coordinate the surrender. The immigration service brought the Cubans from federal prisons and refugee camps last week for mental evaluation at St. Elizabeth’s. The refugees were suspected of having come directly from Cuban mental hospitals. Silver said he doubted if many of those under mental observation came to the United States voluntarily. Silver speculated the Cubans revolted out of rage and frustration. The disturbance was touched off Sunday when contractors at the hospital tried to install grates on the windows and two refugees tried to escape, hospital authorities said. After the takeover, a few refugees wandered in the hospital ward, firing fire extinguishers at police through a barbed-wire fence. The district public defender’s office has filed a petition for release of 23 of the Cubans, maintaining they were placed in an institution illegally. Silver, however, said the refugees aren’t patients or prisoners they are just under evaluation. Lifestyle may promote cancer Negligible risk for pill users United Press International WASHINGTON — The final word is not yet in, but a 10-year Cali fornia study says the risks of taking birth control pills appear negligible. Furthermore, the report said the study of 16,000 young, white, mid dle class women provided “further assurance” that users of oral con traceptives are not more susceptible to cancers of the breast, ovary and uterus. “Oral contraceptive users have no increased risk of death from all causes combined,” the report said. The report, submitted to the Na tional Institute of Child Health and Human Development, said in creased risks that appeared in pill users for heart disease, lung cancer, melanoma skin cancer and early stages of cervical cancer appeared re lated more to lifestyle than pill use. It said, however, that a combined, interactive effect of heavy smoking and oral contraceptive use might be responsible for an increased — though still low — risk of heart dis ease. The report said the question of the pill and smoking and lung can cer needs further clarification. A strong association between melanoma, a serious form of skin cancer, and the pill was seen, but the report said heavy exposure to the sun may be the cause instead of the pill. Multiple sexual partners have been linked to cervical cancer. “Since information is currently lacking about the precise relation ship of oral contraceptive use to these diseases in the absence of their known or suspected risk factors, it seems prudent that women who have any of these risk factors should not take oral contraceptives, ” the re port said. It said women considering the use of oral contraceptives and their advisers “must weigh the pros and cons among uncertainties. ” The study, which began with re cruitment of 18,000 women volun teers between 1968 and 1972, was conducted by the Kaiser- Permanente Medical Center at Wal nut Creek, Calif. The final report, including many findings published separately earlier, is now being pre pared for publication. The Kaiser-Permanente Medical Center is a health maintenance orga nization that asked for volunteers among women enrolled in its health plan. Most of the women were white and middle class because most of the women in the health plan live in or near Walnut Creek, Calif., a pre dominantly white, middle class area. “The main conclusion from this study is that in a population of young, adult, white, middle class women, the risks of oral contraceptive use appears to be negligible,” the report said. Although the report said the study could still be valuable for watching for long-term effects of pill use, the institute has canceled the study be cause of a lack of funds. The study cost $4.34 million. THE BATTALION Page 11 WEDNESDAY, OCTOBER 22, 1980 DIETING? Even though we do not prescribe diets, we make it possible for many to enjoy a nutritious meal while they follow their doctors orders. You will be delighted with the wide selection of low calorie, sugar free and fat free foods in the Souper Salad Area, Sbisa Dining Center Basement. OPEN Monday through Friday 10:45 AM-1:45 PM QUALITY FIRST photo by Pat 0 n, which has Duston Street ig in SE olorado on Centti ruction Aging ion ,15 - Nov,! t 18 sed With ting Foods, ts Tax. o 7:00 PI ESDAY SPECIAl ried Steak n Gravy )tatoes and one other table aad and Butte! or Tea Iran—Iraq war hampers OPEC United Press International BEIRUT, Lebanon — Leading oil analysts say OPEC is “out of business” until the Iraq-Iran war ends and even then will be hampered in moves to raise prices for two or three years. The analysts say the fighting between two of the cartel’s founding members could not have come at a worse time for the Organization of Petroleum Exporting Countries. It broke out only weeks before a planned 20th anniversary summit which was to ratify a long-term pricing strategy designed to provide some much-needed “predictability” to the world oil market and guide OPEC through the 1980s. The meeting was canceled. But now, said Dr. Marwan Iskandar, publisher of the weekly An Nahar Arab Report and Memo, “OPEC is a dead duck.” It is out of business until the Iran-Iraq war ends, and even then its ability to raise prices will be hampered for two or three years.” “The war has frozen everything,” said oil economist Robert Mabro, an Oxford University professor. The long-term pricing strategy called for steady but gradual in creases in the real price of OPEC oil based on a formula combining Western economic growth rates, inflation and currency fluctuations. It cannot be applied now, Iskandar said, “unless OPEC can control its production and keep the market in a rough equilibrium to maintain its price.” But when the war ends,” he said, “both Iran and Iraq are going to have to expand their production to pay for the fighting and the billions of dollars of reconstruction.” As the war drags on, both countries are expected to make deals for raising capital they will pay off in crude oil when the fighting ends. Iskandar said the best case scenario would be for Iran and Iraq to patch up their differences and eventually enable OPEC to function as before. In the worst case, he said, the bitterness will continue indefinitely, hampering OPEC’s ability to respond as a cartel to market conditions and encouraging Baghdad and Tehran to try to recoup their market shares and raise capital by bringing their oil prices down. lao song criticized U n ' te d Press International PEKING - “The East is Red,” e song once sung by millions of ainese praising Mao Tse-tung as eir savior, has been officially criti- sed. An article in the Shanghai news ier Wen Hui Bao distributed lesday in Peking said people have typed singing the song because fy rea |ize it glorified Mao, which las not in keeping with Marxism, the song likened Mao to a red sun Communist Party chairman “the great savior of the people.” It was sung daily in what probably was the world’s largest chorus for decades. The article said the mass singing had muddled the minds of the people. At one point the people were sing ing the “Internationale” — the re volutionary socialist hymn — which denied any such thing as a savior, the newspaper said, and in the next breath they sang “The East Is Red. jr Pre-Med Students Is Also Health Professional Students and Science Majors Are you interested in studying to become a physician? If so, inquire about the University of Dominica, School of Medicine. • Listed in WHO World Directory of Medical Schools • All courses taught in English, by Professors from U.S. Medical Schools • Modeled after American Medical Education System • Four semesters of Basic Sciences taught on the island of Dominica during a sixteen month period • Two years of clinical clerkships at various U,S. teaching hospitals • Eligible after second year for ECFMG application • Graduates eligible for FLEX examinations • Limited number of applicants being accepted for February, 1981 semester For more information, a catalog and application form, write: University of Dominica / School of Medicine \ 350 Fifth Avenue, Suite 3405, New York, NY 10001 A { USED ] GOLD j WANTED! | Cash paid or will swap for Aggie Ring § | Diamonds. f | w diamond brokers international, inc. w l l 693-1647 _ & Please, no plated, layered or gold-filled items as their precious metal content is minimal. vS ENGINEERS... explore career opportunities with Badische Corporation Badische Corporation produces chemicals (at Freeport, Texas) and fibers and yarns (at Anderson, South Carolina and Williamsburg, Virginia). 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