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About The Battalion. (College Station, Tex.) 1893-current | View Entire Issue (April 29, 1982)
. national Congressman Phil Gramm— Making a difference for America’s future, With two sons, Marshall, 8, and Jeff, 6, I share your stake in America’s future. I am committed to ensuring that the America we pass on to our children will be in as good or better shape than when it was passed on to us. Ensuring that our children will inherit the legacy of freedom and prosperity which we have enjoyed will require us to take the long view of what is right as opposed to the short view of what is politically expedient. I ask you, on Saturday, May 1st in the Democratic Primary, to give me a mandate to go back to Washington to finish the job we have started: To rebuild America’s economic and military strength, to balance the budget, to reduce the excessive red tape and regulation which threaten our economic and political freedoms and to reaffirm the sovereignty of the individual citizen. Working together, I believe we can succeed—for ourselves and for our children. Reelect Congressman Phil Gramm Vote in the May 1st Democratic Primary. Paid for by the Committee to Reelect Phil Gramm, Dennis Goehring, Treasurer. Farmer won’t talk jailed in grain raid if. * United Press International LITTLE ROCK, Ark. — Mis souri farmer Wayne Cryts was jailed Tuesday for refusing to name the farmers who helped him raid a grain elevator last year to reclaim soybeans being held in a bankruptcy case. Bankruptcy judge Charles Baker ordered Cryts held in jail on contempt charge until he agreed to name those who helped him. His voice shaking, Cryts told Baker, “Your honor, 1 cannot in good conscience to myself answer any questions. I’m not doing this to be contemptible. I feel I’ve been denied my basic rights and freedoms." The judire told the bailiff. “You bring him (Cryts) back when he says he’s ready to answer questions. The man is in civil contempt for refusing to answer questions.” Earlier this month, a federal judge granted Cryts immunity from criminal action if he agreed to answer the questions. However, Cryts’ fellow farmers were not protected by the im munity offer. Cryts’ face flushed as he stood up to follow the bailif f, looking over his shoulder at his family for a long moment bef ore he left the courtroom. About 30 farmers, most of them wearing American Agri culture movement caps, were standing outside on the court house steps insup| Federal judgesm power, one farmer can lock up farmei order it sold in At a February be : new trial, Cryts invot Amendment agsig incrimination when ® name farmers whoh carrying out the 1981 grain elevators ai fe Mo. Cryts took 31,WlJ soybeans from the&j elevator that was own# bankrupt James Brut ( (>i ning, Ark. Cryts« get a higher price forM Huge dosage increase aids cancer treatment United Press International CHAPEL HILL. N.C. — A huge increase in the dosage of a standard medication for the common form of adult leukemia can more than triple the dis ease’s remission rate, cancer re searchers say. Dr. Robert L. Capizzi, profes- id i — brought about remission in 15 patients who had failed all other types of treatment. In H other patients who had just been diagnosed with acute myelocytic leukemia, lie said. 12 went into remission and the other two died before the treat ment had time to take effect. cause the drugs havea stubborn cases, and laecause the high dose penetrate the natural tween the blood stream central nervoussyste Acute myelocytic the most common leukemia in adults sor of medicine and pharmacol ogy at the University of North Carolina’s Cancer Research Center, said Tuesday that clinic al trials with the treatment — a combination of drugs derived in part from sea sponges in dos ages 30 times higher than usual “These results are signifi cantly superior to those achieved by standard treatments for several reasons.” said Capiz- zi, who released his results in St. Louis at the annual meeting of the Stxiety of Clinical Oncology. “Most importantly, it’s lie- eukemia m adults,o wide recej lx)ne marrow starts ms, , . an uncontrolled nuiriL "t rd , tou mature white blood at ■B” a y s sc < apizzi said theflUsi^^iak coi amounts of Ara prodi* sions in about 25pmti<| cases. The UNC train an 80 percent remisi said. Crash survivor: Pilot warned us about fog United Press International FORT OGLETHORPE, Ga. — The pilot warned his passen gers that Chattanooga was one of the nation’s foggiest places. Minutes later, the plane slam med into a cliff on fog-shrouded Lookout Mountain, killing six men. Bruce Bowers, the sole survi vor of the crash, said Tuesday he was thrown clear of the plane and knocked unconscious. When he woke up he heard the moans of two friends who lay dying in the wreckage of the cor porate plane. “I’m just lucky to be alive,” Bowers said, a week after the twin-engine plane crashed while PARTY PUNCH KNOCKOUTS These sufrer punches will m, ice vour ne\l p. tri\ ,i cn 11 J J.’* ORIGINAL It's JJ. s first pir* elephant! And it's just the beginning 3) THE BLUE LAGOON Nominated by three academic boards for best visual effects without supporting hangoverif If you don t see Brook you didn't drink I jr.jr.’s Wholesale Warehouse "Where good Ags go" 1219 North Texas Ave. 822-1042 /S, I 2) GARCIA'S REVENGE Remember the Alamo? Remem ber Sam Houston? Well drink this delicious punch and you won’t remember your name I A /\N 4) THET-SIP Direct From Austinl WHAT A JAB — WHAT A PUNCH! on its way to Fort Fan “There was another w ting in the seat beside• didn’t make it. “The pilot had i nooga was one of lliefi places in the United SaJ the weather was going to drive to Fort Pal Bowers said from tor Tri-County Hospital« Oglethorpe that thecralj Mitsubishi M-2 turbif plane occurred swiftly <1 passengers had little Your Henc ffibor h'.ast Xla “Everybody just wl gasped and looked 'I another,” Bowers said, remember anything l«s| It was so quick, sonieltej the plane. I ducked, 11® crouch. I knew we were crash. I blacked out.” Five of those killed t| crash were employeesofb bell Taggart Corp. of Dali c hiding two executivevicef dents. A vice president of i maker Inc. o f San Diego wl killed. Fhe crash occurred ak'l miles south ofChattanoop| Lookout Mountain, Ga. Now You Knot United Press Interna® 1 ®I The great Renaissance f M ichelangelo signed onh'fl his works — the Pietain8| ter’s — and did so i hearing a group of siOT erroneously attribute itiefl of Mary to another scuW GROTS /ieesi QgaAc+i 4410 College Main Bryan Are You Tired of Tiny Frozen Burgers and Bland Soggy Nachos? TRY A “GRIAS BURGERS” «» . Beef Patty-Cooked To Your Taste and Dressed As You Like! TRY OUR INCREDIBLE “ORIYCHOSf Both Served Daily 11 a. m. -8 p.m. Patio- and fiee/i Cjasidesi A/<ua Ofiett Happy Ilom* Daily 1-6 Draft Beer Open Daily 10 a. m.-Midnight Weekdays, 10-1 Weekends