iTexasA&M ■ 1 | ■ The DQiTQlion Serving the University community (oi; 76 No. 23 USPS 045360 30 Pages In 2 Sections College Station, Texas Friday, October 1, 1982 ill poisonings cause ylenol capsule recall United Press International CHICAGO — Authorities early to- lawsaid they found cyanide in a cap- lule of ExtraStrenth Tylenol from a wither than the 93,000-bottle batch llready recalled in the deaths of five jeqple in Illinois. Store owners in 31 states pulled a BOO-bottle lot of Extra-Strength Tylenol labeled MC2880 off their heves, fearful they may have some fthe cyanide-laced capsules that kil- ediive people in the Chicago area. Hiarly today, the Du Page County orpner’s office confirmed cyanide tas also found in a capsule taken rom a bottle with the lot number 1D1910. The bottle was found in the tome of one of the victims. The discovery of bottles of possibly bntaminated ExtraStrength Tylenol it several Texas drugstores promp- edpealth officials across the state to- layto warn consumers against taking he painkiller. A Waco pharmacy reported find ing some bottles from a 93,000-bottle batch already recalled in the deaths of five people from cyanide-laced cap sules in Illinois. Lou Mclntire, manager of Sav-On Drugs, said he did not know how many of the bottles of batch MC2880 had been sold at the Waco store and asked customers to return any bottles they had purchased in the last month. Police say the capsules were poisoned by a “very sophisticated, very malicious person.” Police considered the deaths possi ble homicides. Two of the dead men and the critically ill woman were members of the same family. Larry Foster, a spokesman for New Brunswick, N.J.-based Johnson & Johnson, warned consumers not to buy or take Tylenol with the MC2880 lot marking on the bottle. “Apparently a very sophisticated, very malicious person is at large who had to spend a lot of time and a lot of effort to lace these capsules with cyanide,” said Winfield Police Chief Carl Sosta. Consumers in the San Antonio area reported purchasing several bot tles from that second batch — MD1910 — at commissaries at Ran dolph Air Force Base, Fort Sam Houston army base and Lackland Air Force Base. Although no cyanide contamina tion was reported in either city, the discovery prompted Bexar County Health Director Courand Rothe to tell consumers not to take the ExtraS trength capsules period. A spokesman at the Texas Poison Control Center in Galveston said he would “be a little leary of taking any of them (the capsules). At this point I don’t think I would take any ExtraS trength Tylenol. “Flush them down,” he said. staff photo by David Fisher Slaves for Sale McFadden Hall sponsored a slave sale in front of Sbisa Dining Hall Thursday to raise money for charity. Betty Epps (left ), and Kathy Gunderson (right), danced for the enthusiastic crowd of mostly males to help push up the prices bid for them. The slaves will work for their buyer for three hours. Both girls are freshmen from Houston studying business administration. Part of the money went to The United Way. oviet plane crashes and burns, kills 13 ■ United Press International IjUXEMBOURG — A Soviet pilot Ilyushin 11-62 airliner with people aboard crashed and burst flames on landing at Luxem- Irg’s Findel Airport, killing up to [people and injuring 64 others, Ice said today. IA police spokesman said early arsday rescuers had found seven lies but another six people were [sing and presumed dead in Idnesday’s fiery crash. All ambulances in the tiny duchy of some 365,000 people were mobilized to rush survivors, some with serious burns, to hospitals. Authorities called on rescue teams in nearby France and West Germany for help. Some of the 64 injured were flown by helicopter to France, West Ger many and Belgium. A police spokes man said 27 people were released af ter treatment. Col. Jean-Pierre Wagner, of the Luxembourg Gendarmerie, said the . j’-gj ^ plane’s captain and two co-pilots were “safe and sound.” Flight 343 from Moscow, which was to have continued to Lima, Peru, carried 66 passengers and a crew of 11. Airport sources said 15 of the pas sengers were headed for Luxem bourg with the remainder to have continued to Peru. The nationalities and names of the victims were not released immediately. An air traffic controller said the plane, a four-engine Ilyushin 11-62 jet, apparently developed brake trouble. “The aircraft is completely burned up,” a spokesman for Luxembourg Airlines said Wednesday. Radio Luxembourg reported three hours after the accident, mem bers of the Soviet Embassy with megaphones were searching the wooded area where the plane crashed in search of some 20 passengers un accounted for at the time. Airport sources said the night skies ay wl plane came in for a landing, touched the main runway and then suddenly veered to the right. It crashed in a wooded valley, some 1,000 yards away, cutting down dozens of trees and exploding into flames. Many passengers were thrown out of the craft by the blast, the police said. The airport was closed for all traf fic until today. Incoming flights were rerouted to Metz, West Germany. It was the first serious plane crash in Luxembourg, although a private Danish Piper plane crashed at the air port in a storm two weeks ago, killing its three occupants. The last reported crash of an Aeroflot plane was in Moscow in July, which authorities reported killed 99 people. Among other serious Aeroflot acci dents was an Aug. 17, 1979, crash that killed 173 people when two Aeroflot TU134 jets collided over the Ukraine. Legislature pays for fire damages on uninsured University property by Hope E. Paasch Battalion Staff Recent fire damage at Texas A&M University is not covered by insur ance, the director of the insurance and risk management office says. Director John Honea .said only buildings constructed with money from bond sales against the Perma nent University Fund are covered by fire insurance. Buildings and proper ty in this category include dormitories and auxiliary enterprise operations. Campus buildings constructed with money from the Available Fund are not covered by fire insurance, but damages are paid for by the state, he said. The Texas Legislature decided it was more economical to appropri ate funds to pay for fire damage as it occurs rather than insure all build ings. Associate Director of Business Ser vices Gerald Smith said the Legisla ture will not pay for damage from the recent fire in the eleventh-floor di ning area of Rudder Tower, even though Rudder Tower was built with money from the Available Fund. The Legislature would appropri ate funds for structural damage to Rudder Tower, but the contents of the dining area are covered under the University’s fire insurance. The di ning area is run by the Department of Food Services and is considered an auxilary enterprise. The fire caused no structural dam age, so the Legislature will not be asked to appropriate funds for the damages. Honea said the fire last week at the Agriculture Engineering Research Lab caused extensive damage and funds for repairs and replacement of equipment must be appropriated by the Legislature. The acquisition of funds from the Legislature is a lengthy process, he said. The University must prepare a detailed list of damages and seek com petitive bids for replacements and re pairs. The University will request the appropriation from the Legislature when it convenes in January, Honea said. League poll says Mark White has slim lead in Texas gubernatorial race staff photo by David Fisher Cutting times coming The proper way to cut a tree with a chainsaw is demonstrated by Larry Roberts, a senior animal science major from Koonce, at the cutting demonstrations being held this week. People who want to work at the cutting site have to attend the classes and get a cutting card before they can work at the bonfire cutting site. Roberts is in charge of the centerpole for company C-l. United Press International AUSTIN — A poll released by the League of Women Voters Thursday ruled out any appearances by minor party candidates in upcoming guber natorial debates ana also indicated Mark White has a slight lead in his bid to unseat Gov. Bill Clements. The league, which is sponsoring a series of televised debates on the gov ernor’s race, said it would allow minor party candidates to appear if the poll indicated they had 15 percent voter support. David Hutzelman, the Libertarian Party candidate, had been trying to get on the debates but the league’s poll indicated he had less than 1 per cent voter support. Bob Poteet, the Citizen Party candidate, also received less than 1 percent. The poll was based on 925 tele phone interviews, resulting in a 3 per cent margin of error. Respondents first were asked to identify which of the four parties they would vote for in the governor’s race. A second question asked a prefer ence again but gave both the party and the name of the candidate. The results, compiled by Shipley and Associates of Austin, showed White leading Clements 41.6 percent to 38.4 percent. However, if the 3 per cent margin of error is considered, the race could almost be deadlocked. White was predictably pleased by the poll results, but a Clements cam paign spokesman said the poll re ndered stilted results. Tony Garrett of the Clements cam paign said that by asking for a party preference the survey was “politi cized” and guaranteed a higher show ing for the Democratic candidate. He said Clements’ polls still show the in cumbent with a “comfortable lead.” “If you first ask someone for a par ty affilitation you lock them in to that party’s candidate,” Garrett said. “It goes against human nature to contra dict yourself.” But White said the polls demons trates Clements’ loss of support. “Not only does it show that we’re ahead in the race, but it also shows that Clements has been misleading the public with his statements that he’s ‘comfortably ahead’ in the race,” White said. “It also demonstrates that the people of Texas are repudiating Bill Clements’ mudslinging and dirty campaign tactics.” Economic index takes downward swing after showing signs of better times United Press International WASHINGTON — The govern ment’s sensitive index of leading eco nomic indicators dropped 0.9 percent in August, the first downswing in five months, the Commerce Department said today. ^ The four previous months had shown improvement that was repe atedly cited by administration offi cials as signs of approaching better times. An accompanying index of coinci dent indicators, measuring current economic activity, dropped 0.6 per cent, showing August was the worst month so far of the 13-month-old re cession. The negative direction of the fi gures had been publicly estimated several days beforehand by Com merce Secretary Malcolm Baldrige and other department officials, “to soften the impact of the news,” one of the officials said. Questioned on NBC’s “Today” program prior to release of the eco nomic indicators, Treasury Secretary Donald Regan said a one-month de cline after four consecutive months of improvements does not derail re covery. “I would suggest, combining five months, we’re in the up phase,” Re gan said. A separate report by the Labor De partment today showed the latest weekly unemployment claims reached a recession high, a seasonally adjusted total of 703,000 new unem ployment claims for the week ending Sept. 18, the highest since the claims were first adjusted for routine layoff trends in 1963. Commerce Department officials today said historical data show that the August decrease in the leading indicators does not necessarily rule out a recovery beginning by the end of the year. Spokesman for the department’s Bureau of Economic Analysis, Larry Moran, said that “of the last four re cessions, twice we’ve had situations where leading indicators were going up followed by a month or two of decline, followed by a recovery.” From April through July the indi cators climbed 3.8 percent. “We’ve never had a situation where the lead ing indicators increased 2 percent or more which was not immediately fol lowed by a recovery,” Moran said. Five of the 10 indicators available for August declined, led downward by a drop in building permits. Also negative were August claims for un employment insurance, new orders for consumer goods adjusted for in flation, raw materials prices and the length of the average workweek. Increases were led by an expansion in the money supply, adjusted for in flation last month. The pace of de liveries and orders for new equip ment contributed some slight im provement. Also partially offsetting the declines were stock prices and a change in total liquid assets. Another leading indicator, the rate at which new businesses are formed, has not been included in the leading indicators report since December be cause of what the department says are “missing components.” In the latest release, the department announced the business formation indicator may be permanently dropped. The composite index of all the leading indicators was 128.6 in Au gust the department said. V inside Classified National. Opinions Sports.. . State .... Whatsup forecast Today’s Forecast: High in the low 90s, low in the mid 70s. Partly ; cloudy skies. A