Battalion/Page 7 April 8, 1982 Battalion/Page 6 April 8,1982 state / national nples frozen forc es. annister basne ts and relies solel itrogen for cold" i apparently ^ mgh a leak over; I while noonti g, Welch said, uart Nachtweyol! )f all the things; ave gone wrong] is the last pi«( “nt we would hast! o have trouble^ electrophoresis ? I on Columbia’slia ivolved passing i barge throughtj mg clear tubes fill e process divider erent electrical p-] alssaid thefreeit] I not affect plansb His-flow 8 •sis experimenisi ioard the lounh on in June. e is a kind of nos .S.) to regainthti the 50’s,” hesaii U.S. would liketo oy Scout of the* ;s was also blun of Nicaragua's e looking to Ni t expectation, only that, wes a." e the occasional three mostly rek Children get $1.6 million for father’s cancer death Getting acquainted staff photo by David Fisher magery and ftlt n to influence i: ho heard them ive been in fc |i: | iber the stiffen! forres said. r that the | oave been in a P I cultural Lentil Olivia BeJle, daughter of Buddy made a new friend with this Sheltie, Belle, was out with her father and and kissed the dog. hen truck explodes cas neral Motors 10 rcent financitif! United Press International OAKLAND - A tanker-truck tarrying 8,800 gallons of gaso line jackknifed and exploded in lames inside a heavily traveled highway tunnel early Wednes- iay, killing seven people. The accident occurred short ly after midnight in the tunnel connecting Oakland and sub- iurban Contra Costra County. Lhe California Highway Patrol said the identities of the victims were not immediately known. Witnesses said six to eight j:ars were caught inside the west bound lanes of the Caldecott Atnnel on the east side of the liian Francisco Bay when the truck apparently swerved to avoid a transit bus, then ex ploded. Fire teams and rescue work ers, kept out of the tunnel by the heat and heavy black smoke bil lowing out the east end, were allowing the flames to die down before advancing on the fire. The truck, carrying gasoline from a Richmond, Calif., refin ery, was traveling alongside an Alameda-Contra Costra County transit bus when the bus ran into a stalled car and careened into the truck, the CHP said. The tanker, swerving to avoid the bus, hit the side of the tun nel, flipped over and exploded. The bus, nearly split in half, continued out of control, with out its driver, and slammed into a pole outside the west end of the tunnel. David Williams, heading to his Concord, Calif., home, said he saw the bus, “coming out of the tunnel out of control” and hitting the pillar. Tired of having to drive to the city for speed parts at competitive prices? TOTAL PERFORMANCE “different spokes for different folks” 403 University (Northgate) Open 10-7 Mon.-Fri. 10-5 Sat. 846-BIKE 1M ATTENTION ALL CALENDAR GIRLS PI KAPPA ALPHA is now looking for the thirteen most beautiful girls on campus to grace the pages of its 3rd nationally ranked calendar. This is a professional endeavor so serious inquiries only please. For scheduling of interviews call either: Greg Solcher 696-4280 Steve Solcher 696-6135 Mike Strode 696-3577 United Press International BEALTMONT — The U.S. government, B.F. Goodrich Chemical Co. and nine other companies have agreed to pay $1.6 million to six children of a former Goodrich employee who died of bladder cancer. Albert D. Bourgeois Sr., of Port Neches, died in 1979 at the age of 47. He had been an em ployee of Goodrich between 1959 and 1968. His family con tended that Bourgeois was ex posed to phenyl butanaphthla- mine, an antioxidant better known as PBNA. Bourgeois’ wife, Jo Ann, also died of cancer, but attorney Walter Umphrey said it could Prisoner stabbed; refused to testify in warden murder United Press International HUNTSVILLE — A prison inmate who refused to testify on behalf of a prisoner charged with killing a warden was stab bed in his cell, a Texas Depart ment of Corrections official said. Joe Bailey Peacock, 42, re ceived several superficial stab wounds in his back during the attack in his cell at the Ellis Unit in Huntsville last week, TDC spokesman Jay Byrd said Tuesday. Peacock is the second inmate to sustain knife wounds after re fusing to testify in the trial of Eroy Edward Brown, charged in the murder of Ellis Unit Warden Wallace Pack. State District Judge Henry Dalehite of Galveston held Peacock in contempt Feb. 15 when he retused to testify in Brown’s trial. Peacock had told Dalehite he would not testify “without prop er protection.” The Brown trial ended in a hung jury. Peacock was among 10 in mates held in contempt for re fusing to testify on grounds tha either TDC guards or inmate would seek revenge againft them. Byrd said Peacock has e- fused to cooperate with prism officials investigating list Wednesday’s attack. No chaises have been filed, he said. not be proved that her death was related to the production of rub ber at the plants. He explained that the Good rich plant was one of several synthetic rubber plants built in Jefferson County in the early 1940s after the Japanese cap tured the Dutch East Indies and Indochina, cutting off Amer ica’s main source of natural rub ber. The plants used a U.S. gov ernment formula for synthetic rubber, which included PBNA. Studies conducted in the early 1900s indicated that when PBNA is absorbed into the hu man body it changes into another substance that the body cannot get rid of, Umphrey said. Later studies showed that PBNA often causes bladder cancer 16 to 20 years after exposure. The plants stopped using PBNA more than 10 years ago. Bourgeois’ survivors, who range in age from 12 to 23, filed suit, but the settlement was reached just before a jury was to be selected earlier this week. The settlement calls for $120,000 to be split among the children immediately, as well as an immediate payment of $120,000 to the Bourgeois estate. Each child is also to get $20,000 every five years for the next 20 years and $80,000 in the year 2007. Umphrey will be paid $60,000 immediately, plus $31,250 a year for eight years. The money will be paid by the federal government, Goodrich Chemical, Atlantic Refining Co., the B.F. Goodrich Co., E.I. du Pont de Nemours & Co., Fires tone Tire and Rubber Co., Gulf Oil Corp., Gulf Oil Chemicals Division, Monsanto Co., Neches Butane Products Co. and Phil lips Chemical Co. They all pro vided products used in the mak ing of synthetic rubber. RACQUETBALLERS! Enter the TAMU Racquetball Tourna- Jment. Play is April 9, 10 and 11. Entry ifee is *3 00 per person, and forms are 'available in East Kyle Intramural office. [For information, call 693-9451. Your Darskin Headquarters Manor East Mall 779-6718 even killed in tunnel Small explosions could still be heard in the tunnel two hours after the accident, witnesses said. LUNCH SPECIAL SPAGHETTI DISHES $295 Unbelievable Wine Value! /J/J ill Choose Any a Wines From Our Personal selection... 3 bottles for ^7" Mix or Match from Italian, German, French, California and other wines. RAxXTIY’S IvHt UOR 524 E. University Drive 696-1351 LAST CHANCE! • | >( iv . . " ^ ' to give a part of yourself at the AGGIE BLOOD DR 1 ^ ONE Donation Can save FIVE Lives! Wadley Central Blood Bank 9000 Harry Hines Blvd Commons and Sbisa 11 A.M.-7 P.M. 212-224 MSC 11 A.M.-9 P-M* i Sponsored by Wadley Central Blood Bank, APO, OPA and Student Government