The Battalion. (College Station, Tex.) 1893-current, December 10, 1981, Image 10

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    je 10 THE BATTALION
THURSDAY, DECEMBER 10, 1981
latfonal
LA indifferent to killing,
learst says in interview
11
,i\
United Press International
EVV YORK — Patty Hearst
her terrorist associates in the
ibionese Liberation Army had
> what” attitude about killing a
nan in their bank robbery
ie, ABC reported.
In her first interview since
ig released from prison in
9, Hearst told ABC’s Barbara
Iters that after she was cap-
;d in 1976, she gave the FBI
rmation that could have been
d against 30 associates but au-
rities never made use of it.
Hearst, 27, was kidnapped by
\ members on Feb. 4, 1974,
then joined them in a crime
e that lasted until she was cap-
d 19 months later.
1*
She was prosecuted for one
e, robbing the Hibernia Bank
San Francisco, but in her re-
Itly released book, ‘‘Every Sec-
Thing,” she tells of participat-
; in two other bank robberies.
including one in which a woman
was killed.
The newspaper heiress, now
married to a San Francisco police
officer and the mother of a 6-
month-old daughter, spoke with
Walters about the fatal robbery
that took place in Sacramento,
Calif.
“A woman was killed there in
that robbery and she was a cus
tomer in the bank,” said Hearst,
who said she was sitting in the
getaway car at the time.
Hearst said Emily Harris, an
SLA leader along with her hus
band, Bill, killed the woman.
Hearst said the Harrises were
completely unemotional about the
killing.
“It wasn’t something that they
felt badly about,” she said. “Not
like they hade made some horrible
mistake.
“It was, oh, well, she (the vic
tim) was a pig. After all, her hus-
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band was a doctor. So what. It just
... it was so cold. It didn’t matter
what they did to anybody. They
were always right, always.”
Hearst said she told the FBI ev
erything she knew about the Sac
ramento robbery but no one was
prosecuted for it.
“William and Emily Harris
have never been prosecuted for
their role in any of the bank rob
beries or the killing,” Walters
said.
“Patty told us that as a result of
all the information she gave the
FBI, upwards of 30 people could
have been prosecuted for different
SLA crimes.
“No one, she says, was.”
Mrs. Harris and her husband
were convicted on charges of kid
napping and various charges stem
ming from a shootout during a
botched robbery at Los Angeles
sporting goods store.
Hearst said she discussed her
crimes in the book because she
does not fear she will be retried.
“Sometimes my parents don’t
understand why I’m doing this,”
she said. “I’ve had more horrible
threats hanging over my head than
gonna be tried again, you know
not that. I’ve been threatened by
people who were a whole lot bet
ter at it.”
Besides the bank robberies,
Hearst said, she and the SLA
members stole wallets and made
various attempts to bomb police
cars in the Los Angeles and San
Francisco Bay areas.
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319 University Dr. (Northgate) 846-1861
Christmas cheer
■SlafT photo by Colin Valentiw
The Texas A&M Century Singers brought some holiday
cheer and music to listeners in the MSC Main Lounge
yesterday
Theeman.
at noon. The group is directed by Nancy
Buyers could save $25 million
Texas drug law OK’s generics
United Press International
A new pharmacy law will give
Texas consumers an alternative to
expensive brand-name prescrip
tion drugs next year, and some
medical observers said it could
save consumers up to $25 million a
year.
The Texas Legislature last sum
mer passed an amendment to the
Texas Pharmacy Act, which will
permit pharmacists beginning
Jan. 1 to substitute cheaper,
generically equivalent drugs on
some prescriptions with doctor
approval.
Sen. Chet Brooks, D-
Pasadena, who sponsored the bill
in three legislative sessions, said
Texans could save $10 million to
$14 million in prescription costs
the first year and a study by the
Federal Trade Commission said
consumers could eventually save
$20 million to $25 million a year.
However, some participants in
the early stages of the debate had
claimed savings to consumers
would be minimal under the bill.
Although the law states that
pharmacists cannot substitute a
generic drug if it costs more than
the brand name and cannot charge
a higher fee for filling prescrip
tions with generics, there are still
loopholes, said Michael C. Long,
staff attorney for the Texas Medic
al Association.
“The savings ultimately are de
cided by the pharmacist,” he said.
“If the brand name drug costs
$1.50, the pharmacist can charge
$1.49 for the generic and still be
within the law,”
ope<
dru
Sen. Betty Andujar, R-Fort
Worth, who adamantly opposed
the bill until she could add the
money-saving provisions, said
Texas now has one of the best laws
in the country.
*/Ui
'\* N vu \ G222.
PRESentj
701
“We have taken every precau
tion, primarily with senior citizens
who take medication more regu
larly, to assure they will save
money,” she said. “It took of a
couple of sessions to do it, but I
think we have one of the best
(laws) because we were able to
learn from other states.”
Most of the opposition to the
bill came from major drug manu
facturers, who claimed some
generic products would be of low
quality and such a law would dis
courage industry innovation. Fed
eral Drug Administration officials
noted, however, that 90 percent of
all generic drugs are produced by
the major drug firms, which also
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name drugs.
Andujar said she still has some
concern about the import of
generic drugs from European and
South American countries where
production isn’t supervised as
closely as in the United States.
Generic drug products are sold
under their established chemical
name and may differ in color,
taste, tablet shape and packaging.
Only drugs that are therapeutical
ly and pharmaceutically equiva
lent may be substituted, meaning
they must contain the same active
ingredient as the brand name drug
and must be identical in strength,
dosage form and method of intake.
The FDA pointed out that all
brand name drugs do not have
generic equivalents, but of the
3,330 non-patented prescription
drug products approved by the
FDA, about 2,400 are generics.
The FDA’s Approved Drug
Products List includes more than
5,000 drugs approved for market
ing in the United States. About
one-third of the drugs listed are
available only from manufacturers
who hold patents on the product.
The patents prevent other com
panies from copying the drug for
17 years, according to John Kra-
kosky, supervisory investigator for
the FDA in Dallas.
Krakosky said generic drugs
have been at a disadvantage be
cause physicians become familiar
with a patented drugs and many
are reluctant to sway from them.
Because generic names are
often descriptive of the chemical
composition or class of the drug,
the names may be more difficult to
spell or pronounce. Krakosky said
this could cause initial problems
because doctors generally prefer
to write the shorter brand names.
“It’s much easier for a physician
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Over Seas Appliances
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ASKING
ITEM
BRAND
PRICE
Air Conditioner
20,000 Btu
G.E.
$429.00
Air Conditioner
17,000 Btu
G.E.
$390.00
Freezer
2S cu. ft.
West
$442.00
Refrigerator/Freezer
w/ice maker
21 cu. ft.
Frigidaire
$980.00
Gas range
76.2 cm.
Colorie
$397.00
Washer
WA8062
G.E.
$375.00
Dryer
DDE 521 1
G.E.
$245.00
Dehumidifier
DH (30 point)
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Vacuum Cleaner
Electrolux
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AM/FM Stereo Radio with
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Irons
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Buy Any Or All!!
846-5816 Before 6 p.m.
846-4948 or 779-6105 After 6 p.m.
to write the brand name Libri®
instead of its generic name, elilor
diazepoxide hydrochloride or In
write simply Darvon Compound
65 instead the generic, propos
yphene hydrochloride, aspiri
phenacetin and cafieine, Krab
ky said.
The new law is a radical chans
from the one Texas pharmacist!
have practiced since 1948, sail
Luther Parker, executive directo:
of the Texas Pharmaceutical Asso
ciation.
However, he said theTPAis
trying to familiarize pharmacists
with all aspects of the law before#
goes into effect.
Parker said consumers wil
increased savings from the
but he added that pharmacist;
may have to increase prices some
what to recover expenses of in
creased inventory, consultatios
with patients and extra liahilityin-
surance.
The FDA said people over®
make up 11 percent of the popula
tion, but pay 25 percent of ths
nation’s $9 billion annual prescif
tion bill. Brooks said his bill v
lower the cost of drugs and
aimed at helping senior citizens
low income people and [
who are under long-term media
tion.
In a price survey in four Texas
cities last December, theconsum
er association found the
quilizer Miltown sellingfori
a bottle, while the same amounld
the generic equivalent, me
mate, sold for $2.82.
In Dallas, a pharmacy listedtk
brand drug Hydro Diuril, used#
treat high blood pressure,
for $5.67 for 10050-milligram tab
lets, while the generic equivalent,
hydrochlorothiazide, sold
$3.38. The anti-depressant 1
sold for $16.67 for 100
milligram tablets, while
generic amitriptyline sold («
$9.97. The brand name anti
histamine, Benadryl: sold fa
$7.26 for 100 50-milligram tablets
while the generic diphenl
mine sold for $4.37.
“I think this will be one
best achievements as far as econv
mic relief,’ Brooks said. “It’sifa
as noticeable as some of the ts
relief programs as far as holdinj
the line oncost, but it will be most
significant to people of low
middle income who really i
some economic relief.”
The success of the law, i
observers said, lies with consul
ers, whom they encouraged todis
cuss substitution possibilities"!!
their physicians and pharmacists
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Women’s scoop neck, French-
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Postage & handling $1.
Send Check/M.0. to:
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PO Box 342, Norwich,VT 05055
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