The Battalion. (College Station, Tex.) 1893-current, October 29, 1982, Image 13

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    Battalion/^
October 29, ]J
Record amount of American workers
received unemployment checks Oct. 9
ic ting a new inits,
I I He faulty (
■ United Press International
WASHINGTON — A record
■62,000 American workers re-
one iceSved unemployment checks
n K s went well ur diiring the week ending Oct. 9,
May, and then the government reported
looking Thursday, with increased new
Kiske said. 'claims indicating continued
"as readmittedii double-digit unemployment.
Hospital whettH Che figure surpassed a re
cent a second opt coni government pay-out to un
to conea drainajHiployed woikers that has
iver. stood for more than seven years.
Dr. ArnoldColoduiH The Labor Department's
nd his wife, Mari Employment and Training
on was only a ten. Administration also said initial
i and said lamif o# 111 ' 1 '' Cor jobless benefits rose
liver transplant 3,000 to 687,000 in the week
were hopin ended Oct. 16 in seasonally ad-
lat that wouldn't j u5lc<l figures,
tat we would hauttl
•iske said.
The data was the last regard
ing the unemployment picture
before next Tuesday’s congres
sional elections. The overall
September unemployment rate
was a post-Depression high of
10.1 percent. October Figures
will he released Nov. 5.
Department spokesman
Steve McManus said the
4,662,000 total recipients of un
employment checks eclipsed by
1,000 the old record of
4,661,000 set during the week
ended May 31, 1975. The new
total also reflected an increase of
43,000 from the previous week’s
revised level.
McManus noted, however,
that the current 5.3 percent un
employment rate among those
covered by unemployment in
surance, is below the 7 percent
level during the 1975 recession.
Not included in the seasonally
adjusted figures, however, are
544,400 federal employees,
newly discharged veterans, rail
road workers and those receiv
ing extended jobless benefits.
Unadjusted data from the de
partment showed that Michigan
had the highest insured unem
ployment rate in the nation, sur
passing West Virginia, the lead
er for several weeks.
Michigan reported a 6.8 per
cent unadjusted rate for the
week ended Oct. 9, followed by
i* was transferredd
University Him
|>olis on Sept, liu
nains with herd
for word on ij
Study shows less electricity
is better for resuscitation
nth-old infant
from a lo-nwn
>t h brain dead. Bi
I they need the Im
rv close to Jantiet
ate, 18 liver iran<|
rn done at the
United Press International
time, Fiske said ■BOSTON — Doctors and pa-
viv 'lie neetlttheiB l)U . ( |j ( s u | )( ,
use high-energy
nmediately." elairical shocks to revive heart
Fiskes have hrfftack victims may get better re-
ir a kidney: onei j suits by using half the dosage,
km archers reported today.
I A study of 249 patients in
battle showed the survival rate
among sufferers of ventricular
fibrillation — rapid contractions
ol the heart muscle that cause an
incgular heart beat — was the
■me whether they received
maximum shocks of 320 joules
ol electricity, or a lower dosage
ol 175 joules.
I But Dr. W. Douglas Weaver
the H.u horview Mr< In .il ( < n-
i 1 i tei, who headed the study, said
e shocks can slow tire heart-
fit if the joules are too strong.
He said 75 percent ol the pa-
mts who received repeated
ipeks at the higher energy level
iffered atrioventricular block,
slowing of the heartbeat, and
juired more shocks to halt the
ibrillation.
The slowed heartbeat did not
suit from the lower-level
ocks, he said.
All of the victims in the study
w ere treated outside the hospital
by doctors or paramedics. The
findings were reported in the
New England Journal of Medi
cine.
Weaver said the slower heart
beat was transitory and was sta
bilized with cardiopulmonary
resuscitation.
But he said the study shows
that paramedics and doctors,
who treat 350,000 heart attack
victims a year in the U.S., should
first try lower-level shock •
1
mm
JESUS
IS
LORD
Sunday Services:
Sunday School 9:45 a.m.
Morning Worship 8:30 a.m.
11:00 a.m.
Evening Worship 6:30 p.m.
ALDERSGATE
UNITED METHODIST CHURCH
ii
MSC CAREER DEVELOPMENT REESE NTS:
A PROGRAM TO INFORM
PROSPECTIVE STUDENTS
ABOUT GRADUATE STUDIES
INLAW AND BUSINESS.
LAW PROGRAM
MBA PROGRAM
COST
8BQ LUNCM
COST
830-12
1-4 30
$2.00
12-1
$4.50
\MB A_>
LAW,
JD A Y
SATURDAY,
NOVEMBER fc, 1982
A&A BUILDING
ADVANCE TICKET SALES'
• MSC BOX OFFICE, OCT 25-NOV5
-TICKETS AVAILABLE
AT THE DOOR
- A VA LOBBY, to -2. , Nov I -5
Directions for the future...
TEXAS
SUNDAY and MONDAY are AGGIE NIGHTS
r ay
ers
S. flJijll
id m
ing)
r,
Special Tumbleweed prices for all you Aggies,
AND all those who wish they were!
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— m ■
1521 Texas Ave. South in Culpepper Plaza (College Station) • 696-7773
West Virginia’s 6.6 percent.
Other high figures were re
corded by Pennsylvania, 6.3 per
cent; Oregon, 5.8 percent; Ida
ho, Mississippi, and Washing
ton, all 5.6 percent; Alabama,
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and Illinois, 5.2 percent.
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764-0601
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135 mm Ektachrome or Fuji-
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s 2°° Off
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“Our community’s growth has
multiplied the number of cases
appearing on the JR court
docket. I will computerize the
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ficient and even-handed treat
ment of those who have a case
before this court!”
Paid political advertisement
Hugh Lindsay Campaign Committee,
Wesley Hall, treasurer.
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