1 l=i 5,1982 state/national Battalion/Page 9 March 26, 1982 onal ikians Medical) ish heart with Dr. i surgical art Insti' rector o( arogram, Ians havt t a traits- nst Knf> :w dean,' ative. rogrami lability of aorin A, ants, nd Dru; asiderint drug as it has Jniversitl ifornia art trans- Stanfori .iccessfti peratioti sporin \ isults an, fs whin the boci ed ori he otl t prow g also has ul in tb ost of tin still funo e said, aartificii | last Jul a hum nan die ant. ad 191 21 hi of his NATO ministers reject Soviet offer an a fei died aft lakey i licine pe splants i betwet lougli deceaset lived s I Drumming up ‘grass’ roots support staff photo John Kyan Scott Miller, a representative of the Texas state hands out information oft the organization to branch of N.O.R.M.L., the National passerbys in front of Rudder Fountain. Organization for the Reform of Marijuana Laws, Highway court cases settled United Press International COLORADO SPRINGS, Colo. — In a show of unity against the Soviet Union, NATO defense ministers unani mously turned down Soviet President Leonid Brezhnev’s offer to freeze deployment of medium-range missiles aimed at Western Europe. The 13 ministers, winding up a two-day meeting at the Broad moor Hotel, reaffirmed their “strong support” Wednesday of the Reagan administration’s offer to halt deployment of new missiles in Europe if the Soviets removed the SS-20s. But the Western leaders restated their decision to deploy 572 new mis siles beginning next year. The position of the NATO ministers was explained in a communique issued at the close of a conference of the Nuclear Planning Group. NATO Secretary General Joseph Luns of Belgium said Denmark had reservations ab out the group’s rejection of the Soviet proposal which was made March 16, but those reservations involved only a technical issue. “Vou can take it that it (the vote) was unanimous,” Luns said. “There was no hint of put ting in a veto.” He said Denmark had sug gested the Soviet proposal be discussed at the foreign ministe rial level. In the communique, the NATO leaders said a freeze on SS-20 deployment would only maintain the Soviet monopoly in longer-range, land-based, medium-range missiles. It said existing SS-20s could remain in place, but NATO would be prohibited from de ploying such missiles. “It is well known that these Soviet missiles, given their range and the ease with which they can be relocated, are a threat to NATO wherever they are lo cated,” the communique said. “These proposals would, there- NATO rejection of the Soviet proposal came as no surprise, and fol lowed a similar stance taken by the Reagan ad ministration. fore, leave the Soviet Union free to continue its buildup east of the Urals, well within the range of NATO Europe.” The NATO ministers again called on the Soviet Union to match the United States’ nego tiating in good faith. And they repeated their re solve, in the absence of such negotiations, to begin deploying 108 Pershing I Is and 464 cruise missiles in five European coun tries beginning in December 1983. NATO rejection of the Sovie - proposal came as no surprise and followed a similar stance taken by the Reagan adminis tration. The U.S. delegatior had sought NATO’s endorse ment as a demonstration of unity. U.S. Defense Secretary Gas par Weinberger told a news con ference the Soviet offer was no directed to achieving the zen option proposal made by the United States at the start of the arms reduction talks in Genev;, Nov. 30. Zero option is the code word for the offer not to deploy ; 572 Pershing II and cruise mis' siles. He said a freeze of SS-20 mis ;, sile deployment in European. Russia would leave the Soviet? free to manufacture all they> want (of SS-20s) and deploy alt they want east of the Urals. U Weinberger, who left after" the meeting to begin a 10-day trip to Asia, called the gathering ■ “a very successful meeting, if very unified meeting.” J nai \ I nd lerljfau 1 ar said l* one-acr | iw of ill » who IIS' 1 s recen- new life ho runi | n senin Iroadfr -cents® ht o| felt! dren' United Press International AUSTIN — Five highway construction contractors in dicted on federal charges of bid rigging on Texas highway de partment contracts have reached settlements in separate antitrust cases filed by the state. Attorney General Mark White announced Wednesday that the five firms had reached agreed judgments totaling more than $960,000. The five were among 21 com panies and 16 individuals named in federal suits that charge Texas highway contracts were inflated as far back as 1976 by advance decisions which de termined which company would be the low bidder. White also had filed antitrust suits against eight Lubbock con tractors. Wednesday he announced another antitrust suit, this one against the San Antonio firm of Schwope Inc. and its secretary-treasurer. “We either are negotiating or are evaluating the status of the remainder of the companies charged by the federal govern ment with an eye to filing suit against them,” White said. White said the five firms that reached agreed judgments Wednesday were E.W. Hable & Sons Inc. of Tyler, C.H. Allison Paving Co. of San Antonio, Schwabe and Mikey’s Paving Inc. of Shiner, and the Lubbock firms of Boswell and Grafton Inc. and Stafford Construction much money the state may have Inc. lost because of charged bid- Officials did not disclose how rigging. GOT A CRAVING FOR PICKLES? TEXAS A&M MECHANIZED AGRICULTURE CLUB Spring Lawnmower Clinic 17.50 Oil Change Sharpen Blade New Spark Plug Steam Clean New Points & Condenser Service Air-Filter (Other Parts & Services Available for Additional Cost) An extra $2.50 will be charged if pickup & delivery is desired. 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