Page 12A THE BATTALION WEDNESDAY, AUGUST 26, 1981 National N Rare plane used as crop duster DC-4 aircraft used in spraying United Press International VANCOUVER, Wash. — The bright, red paint job on E.J. “Buzz” Gothard’s biplane crop sprayer seems only natural — it was built in the Soviet Union. Gothard found the single engine plane in New Delhi, India, two years ago and just finished a year’s worth of restoration in time to show off what friends call “Gothard’s Goose” during a weekend air show at Evergreen Airport. The huge, red and silver plane is the largest of its kind in the world and one of two such models flying in the West. It was built in 1966 from a design that had not changed since 1949. Medfly quarantine expanded 77fA m WE’VE NEVER BEEN LICKED AUG 29,SAT.10:30p.m. at the GROVE, $1.25 An AGGIE Tradition To See It More Than Once! sponsored by MSC TRAVEL United Press International California deployed World War II DC-4 cargo planes to spray the Mediterranean fruit fly Tuesday and expanded its produce quarantine zone to 3,000 square miles. Sen. S.I. Hayakawa, R-Calif., called for an even larger spraying campaign. The Medfly eradication program also may be getting financial help soon now that a legislative committee desig nated $28 million to the campaign. Richard Steffen, a spokesman for the Medfly eradication team, said extensive spraying was set for early Tuesday using three of the huge DC-4s and 11 helicopters to keep up with new infestations. The quarantine area now includes the northern portion of San Benito County and all of Santa Cruz County. Hayakawa, a consistent critic of Gov. Edmund G. Brown Jr. and state Medfly officials, immediately called the bor derwide quarantine of the Redwood-shrouded coastal county “unjustified.” In an impromptu news conference in Sacramento, where he was taping a television interview, Hayakawa said there was no justification for quarantining all of Santa Cruz county but called on Brown to order an immediate aerial pesticide attack on one-third of the state’s agricultural regions. “We must start tomorrow preventive aerial spraying of all agricultural areas north of Bakersfield to Sacramento, he said. “There can be no delay. The spraying must begin tomorrow. The enlarged Medfly war zone — now 3,000 square miles, one-third of which is under orders to be sprayed — came in response to more discoveries of flies that have defied intensive spraying and moved into new territory along the central California coastal valleys and mountains. A legislative committee added $28 million to fight the Medfly Monday and sent the bill to the Assembly floor. The estimated cost of the Medfly battle so far is $68 million. The areas being sprayed extend from the west side of San Francisco Bay near Palo Alto south past Hollister and the Salinas Valley with two separate areas near Livermore and Fremont and an isolated section around Boulder Creek in Santa Cruz County. The discovery of three fertile flies and one larva during the weekend outside previously sprayed areas were the first in the rich coastal region, which grows much of the nation’s lettuce and fresh vegetables. During the night Monday spraying was completed om new area near Ben Lomond in Santa Cruz County andina area farther north near Woodside in San Mateo County ami a section of Santa Clara County, spokesman Dan Dickey reported. Highway checkpoints were moved southward to edges of the new quarantine area. Dickey said more cheek points would be added. Meanwhile, negotiations continued in Japan U.S. and Japanese officials over importation of California fruit. Meetings during the weekend were inconclusive, hi a source told UPI in Tokyo that Japan would pro to let in fruit from non-quarantined zones if U.S. officials could prove scientifically that no danger existed. In Dallas a federal judge said he would give Texas the U.S. Department of Agriculture time to negotiate compromise on how large the California quarantine zona should be to stpp the spread of the Medfly. The decision by U.S. District Judge Patrick Higgin botham came a day before he was scheduled to rule in ash by the state of Texas against the USDA demanding thattlit quarantine zone be increased. Chapman gets 20 years in prison United Press International NEW YORK — Mark David Chapman, the self-proclaimed a^MSC AGGIE CINEMA PRESENTS RONALD REAGAN “Catcher in the Rye,” was in a heavily guarded solitary cell Tues day, awaiting transfer to the state prison system where he will serve a minimum 20-year sentence for killing ex-Beatle John Lennon. Chapman, 26, who pleaded guilty in June saying God had ordered him to confess, was kept under 24-hour guard after his sen tencing Monday. He was held in in fcU-QKh ALSO STARRING NANCY DAVIS WAV SUNDAY AUG. 30 8:45 GROVE $1.00 WITH TAMU I.D. G TODAY 2:45 5:00 7:30 9:30 lillJuLlIJU 846-6714 {CORNER OF UNIVERSITY AND {COLLEGE AVE TODAY ONLY ALL ’.OU UNTIL 6:00 PM ^ Dudley Moore Liza Minnefti Arthur TODAY 2:55 5:15 M 7:30 9:30 vj 88 SHIPMENT JUST ARRIVED!! A New Shipment of Fall Wicker Has Just Arrived and It’s All On Sale! EVERYTHING IN STOCK 50% r,*i O OFF EVERYTHING ELSE IN STOCK 25% OFF ★ Large selection of Wicker Baskets & Other Wicker Decorations ★ A Few Wicker „ x Bookshelves & Trunks * Boston Fern ★ Silk Flowers & ★ Hanging Baskets While They La " ! 50% OFF Silk Flower Arrangement ★ Large Selection of Ficus, Palms, Marganatas, Closet Plants & Norfolk Pines. • Peperomia • Creeping Charlies • Swedish ivy • Purple Jews • AND MORE! No Charges. No Rainchecks & No Delivery on Sale Items Sale Excludes Soils, Chen(iicals & Fertilizers POTS OF PRIDE 1903 Old Hearne Rd. (V/7 Blocks Past Texas Mobile Home Outlet) OPEN WED.-SUN. 8 A.M.-6 P.M. 822-1478 the same isolated Rikers Island cell where he has been since the Dec. 8 slaying — a lone inmate in a unit meant to hold up to 18 pris oners. The one-time Beatles fan was to be transferred Tuesday to the Ossining Correctional Facility, a prison that serves as an entry point for all inmates beginning sent ences in the state system. Chapman clutched a copy of J. D. Salinger’s novel “The Catch er In The Rye” throughout his sentencing in a state Supreme Court chamber in Manhattan packed with spectators, including a small band of Lennon fans. Chapman read a passage from the novel as his “final spoken words. Chapman — who was carrying a copy of the book when he was arrested for Lennon’s shooting — has said the key to the killing of the rock idol can be found in the novel, an account of a young man’s troubled adolescence. “I keep picturing all these little kids playing some game in this big field of rye and all,” Chapman read. “Thousands of little kids, and nobody’s around — nobody big, I mean — except me. “And I’m standing on the edge on some crazy cliff. What I have to do, I have to catch everybody if they start to go over the cliff — I mean if they’re running and they don’t look where they’re going, I have to come out from somewhere and catch them. That’s all I’d do all day. I’d just be the catcher in the rye .” The words echoed in the quiet courtroom. “John, John,” a young woman murmured, weeping softly. Before the sentencing, psychiatrist Daniel Schwartz, cal led in an effort to prove the de fense contention that Chapman is insane and therefore not responsi ble for the slaying, testified he be lieved he was the ruler of a king dom of “little people” and destroy them at will. Schwartz also said Chapman, who had no real control over actions, actually became Lennon in his own mind, and decided destroy the real Lennon becauss he was “evil” and “a phony.” Assistant District Attorney Allen Sullivan, disputing the de fense contention of insanity, said Chapman was a publicity-seeking opportunist who killed Lennonlo gain fame. Justice Dennis Edwards, cal ing the killing a “knowing, volun tary act,” said, “There is no doubt in the court’s mind that lie accountable, responsible.” He also said Chapman woi “benefit” from psychiatric treat ment. Flanked by armed guards Chapman remained impassive Edwards ordered him to serve years to life in prison. Convict asks for death by gas chambe United Press International RIVERSIDE, Calif. — A con victed murderer who still main tains his innocence has been sent enced to die in the gas chamber— at his request. “I cannot show remorse for the crimes charged in this case be cause I am innocent and have already testified to that fact,” Michael Ray Burgener said in a statement read to the jury Mon day by his attorney. “I ask you to impose the death penalty so the remaining years of my life, whether short or long, may be spent with some dignity on death row rather than warehoused in the general population of a max imum security prison.” Burgener, 31, convicted earlier this month of murdering a con venience store clerk during a $50 robbery last October, also asked his attorney not to let his parents testify as character witnesses in his penalty-phase trial. “I do not wish to beg for my life,” he explained to the jury, cannot ask anyone else to beg; my life.” State prison officials s Burgener, who has been con victed of six previous felonies eluding the attempted murderofa pawn-shop employee and battery on two San Quentin Prison guards, has been a target of prison gang violence in the past. 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