-national I Battalion/Pag:: January 27,111 i Doctor tells of violent captors United Press International l ALTON, Ill. — Dr. Hectoi iZevallos, the abortion clinic 'operator who was abducted and * held captive for eights days by »three members of the Army of »God, says the three told him they * had “bombed and burned” " other abortion clinics. “They said they had bombed .‘ and burned clinics in the past,” jsaid Zevallos, “and they would ^continue to do so as long as abor- vtion is legal.” £ Zevallos was the first witness 4 called Tuesday at the trial of nDon Benny Anderson, 42, of Pearland, Texas. Anderson is ; one of three men who allegedly abducted Zevallos and his wife, Rosalie Jean, from their * Edwardsville home on Aug. 12. The three identified themselves . as belonging to the Army of IGod. ’ . The couple was held captive in an abandoned concrete bunk er near Illiopolis for eight days until Zevallos agreed he would stop performing abortions at the clinic. They were taken back home and released unharmed. Zevallos, a native of Peru, said he and his wife were kept blind folded and handcuffed together, and constantly feared they would be killed. “At every second, we thought we were going to be executed,” said Zevallos. “I never thought that we’d be freed.” Zevallos, 53, was composed during most of his testimony, but faltered when speaking of his wife. U.S. District Judge Wil liam L. Beatty suggested a re cess, but Zevallos waved him off. “There was not one second that she did not cry,” Zevallos said of his wife. “I tried to con sole her and tell her everything was all right. I was trying to get her to be strong.” Zevallos identified Anderson as one of three men who came to his house the night of the abduc tion, and inquired about land the doctor had for sale. When they went outside to inspect the property, Zevallos said the three jumped him. Zevallos said the concrete bunker was extremely hot, and had only a large can containing a plastic trash bag as a lavatory. He said he and his wife were given mostly peanut butter sandwiches and soda for food. Zevallos said the three initially wanted money, but later forced him to make a tape asking Presi dent Reagan to speak out against abortion. Zevallos said he realized then they were “fanatics who would kill us with out hesitation.” “He kept saying he talks to God,” Zevallos said of Ander son. “He said he gets the vibra tions in his body and puts them into words.” Under cross-examination, Zevallos said he and his wife were not physically harmed, but added, “Emotionally we were harmed, and we are still harmed.” Defense attorney Wayne T. Schoeneberg asked Zevallos a- bout his clinic, and the doctor said it performed about 70 abortions a week at a minimum charge of $200. The doctor said the clinic had a yearly income of about $750,000 from abortions. “Do you believe life begins at conception,” Schoeneberg ask ed Zevallos. The doctor hesitated, then answered, “I don’t.” “Don’t people picket the place all the time,” asked the attorney. “No,” replied the doctor. The two others charged in the incident are brothers from New Caney, Texas. Wayne A. Moore, 18, pleaded gulty to a conspiracy charge and is expected to testify against Anderson. Matthew Moore, 20, is awaiting trial. Anderson sat impassively during Tuesday’s proceedings. He blew kisses to his wife and mouthed “I love you” when en tering and leaving the cour troom. Anderson is charged only with conspiring and attempting to obstruct interstate commerce by threats of force. State authorities have said they will await the outcome of the trial and possible sentencing before deciding whether to pur sue kidnapping charges. Feder al officials said the three defen dants were not charged with kid napping because they did not take the Zevalloses across state lines. ORIGINAL THIIMKINC mga imp<> In the age of information technology, a comp? 1 * 11 ^ —whose sales of $1.7 billion annually and wte[ ront products and components extend from dataacq* A sition and information processing through n communication to voice, video and graphic corand' munication — is making original thinking a rea steel for their new graduates. che ! ON CAMPUS INTERVIEW'!? February 18th a P f Electrical, Civil and Mechanical Engineenng Computer Science and Technical Sales ottt (EE. ME. CS) Majors Make arrangements at the Placement Offic? its cc art t< IS in S< rasL •l An Equal Opportunity Employer, M/F/H/V lose | plan pon- Cyanide threats puzzling United Press International NEW ORLEANS — Officials arrested six people in connec tion with a string of cyanide poisoning threats against dozens of Louisiana water systems and said they were close to more arrests today. The scare was not believed to be part of an orga nized effort. An angry Gov. Dave Treen promised Tuesday to “spare no expense” in tracking down the callers, who had threatened to poison at least 53 water systems, and assembled a state-federal task force to combat the bizarre outbreak. By late Tuesday authorities had arrested a 20-year-old Gon zales man and five teenagers in various communities. State police said more arrests were ex pected today. “I want the perpetrators of this crime to know they will be prosecuted to the absolute limit of the law,” Treen said. “The • head of the state police has been instructed he is to spare no ex pense. We’re going to put an ; end to this foolishness.” The anonymous phone threats, which began last Thurs day in St. Gabriel and spread to other communities during the weekend, puzzled authorities and deprived up to a quarter- million people of tap water Monday, the systems could then be tested for poison. On Tuesday, traces of the poison were detected in tests on a sample from the Hammond water system, but subsequent . samples revealed none. , “We do not feel there is any organized effort,” State Police Commander Grover “Bo” Gar rison said. “There have been dif ferent voices — male and female voices.” Hammond officials shut down their water system Mon day night after receiving an anonymous phone threat. “There could have been cyanide introduced to the Ham mond water,” Dan Strecker, a chemist and lab supervisor for West Paine Laboratories in Baton Rouge, said. “But, based on the huge quantities of water you’re dealing with in a muni cipal system, you could put . cyanide in it that’s not detected.” State health officials said mi nute amounts of cyanide natu rally can occur in water. Lafayet- . te Mayor Dud Lastrapes said it would take some 14 tons of cyanide to affect his city’s sys tem, and even that amount would be insufficient to pose health hazards. When Is Your Selling No Secret^^H^^ At All? WHEN OVER 30,000 PEOPLE READ IT IN THE BATTALION If you've got somethin *ell we ll get your r *oge across! And our readership guoran you lots of prosp< 845-2611 IIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIH lllllllllllllllllllllllimilllllllllllllllUINHIimillltUfiHMHI Volume 5, Number4 Supplement to The Battalion Paid advertising, prepared by the College of Business Administration Expanded Program for 1983 Career Fair! by Susan DuBois What comes once a year, gives business students an edge in job- hunting, gives recruiters an edge in personnel recruiting, and gives Business Student Council mem bers a lot of headaches and a big sense of accomplishment? If you answered, "The Annual Business Career Fair!," you're absolutely right. This year's Career Fair, to be held January 31 through February 2, will feature some 55 companies on two days. Company booths will be set up in the first floor lobby of the Academic & Agency Building, and students may stop by anytime between 8:30a.m. and 4:30p.m. to meet company representatives. Several new and growing com panies will be represented this year at the Fair for the first time. Included among the new partici pants are Randall's Food Markets of Houston, Radio Shack, and Tymeshare. Many of the com panies that have been coming for the past few years will be return ing for Career Fair '83, among these are Gulf, Exxon, the "Big Ten" public accounting firms, Pennzoil, Tenneco, Luby's . . for Career Fair January 31, 1983 for Recruiters nd Inn, rooms A & B 7-00 tun Tuesday, February 1, 1983 Retailing Career company booths open A&A Building, first and second floor . ; - : . . -; . ' 1 10 pm Booths closed. Kyle Field press I I pm Company booths reopen for student visits A&A Building, 7:00 pm Career Fair Students seated at chosen comt Academic Achievement Awards presentations MSC second floor, main banquet room, 224 Wednesday, February 2,1983 7:00 am Breakfast for Company Recruiters MSC Cafeteria liner eer Symposium Keynote Address, Panel Discussions Rudder Tower, room 601 1:30 pm Company booths reopen junumg, rirsi 1:30 pm Retailing Career Symposium continues Rudder Tower, room 601 4:30 pm Career Fair booths close 6:30 pm "Take a Student to Dinner" Company recruiters host selected students *1 ■ HI Cafeterias, H.E.B Grocery Stores, Safeway Groceries, ARCO, Marathon Oil, AT&T, Harper & Pearson, West Texas Utilities, and many major banks. Students also have the chance to meet with company representa tives at the Career Fair Banquet. Each student reserves a seat at the banquet table of a particular com pany; you may choose the com pany that seems most interesting to you, on a first-come first-served basis until each company table is filled. Banquet tickets sell for $5 each and are on sale in the A&A lobby Monday through Friday January 24-28. The banquet will be held Tuesday, February 1 at 7p.m. in the MSC second floor banquet rooms. The Business Student Council is also sponsoring a series of semi nars on topics of interest to stu dents of all classifications through out Business Week. Topics to be covered in the Career Fair semi nars include the future for women in business, changing values in the business world, how much com puterese should a graduate know, salesmanship, a graduate's per sonal finances in the first year after graduation, and how to deal with stress. Guest speakers include managers, recruiters, and Texas A&M faculty and staff. Look for signs announcing time and place for each seminar in the first floor lobby of the A&A Building. As a new part of Business Career Fair in 1983, the Center for Retail ing Studies in the Department of Marketing is sponsoring the Re tailing Career Fair. Retailers such as Dillard's, H. E. Butt, Joske's, Neiman-Marcus, and Kroger's will have booths set up on February 1 along with the other companies attending Career Fair. Seminars and panel discussions dealing with retailing topics will be pre sented on February 2 from 8:30 a.m. to 4:00 p.m. in room 601 of Rudder Tower. A listing of retail company booths and a complete schedule for the Retailing Career Symposium will be provided in this publication on Monday. The Business Career Fair is en tirely student-planned and con ducted. Each year for the past three years, members of the Busi ness Student Council have plan ned, organized, and hosted the Career Fair in conjunction with Business Week activities. The Business Student Council, made up of elected and appointed stu dent members from each of the de partmental organizations, works the entire year preparing for the annual event. Each phase of the Fair is handled by many volunteers organized into a network of committees: hos pitality, meals, seminars, booths, publicity, banquet, "The Busi ness", and reception. Without the work of these volunteers to set up booths, answer the phones, handle corres pondence, greet the company rep resentatives, make banquet and meal arrangements, and run many errands. Business 'Career Fair would never be successful. Each year more than 100 students give of themselves and of their time to make the Fair a reality. What do the companies think of the Business Career Fair? "The Business Career Fair is an excellent medium for identifying potential recruits and helping stu dents with their course selection decisions," wrote David Rainwa ter, Director of Employment and Business Week '83 Schedule Classrooms filled with students and college professors this week will have the special benefit of the expertise and experience of prac ticing business professionals from the "real world." This will afford an opportunity for learning and growth through questioning and interchange of ideas between visit ing executives and students. The classes to be visited include the following: Monday January 31 BAN A 427, 12 noon; SANA 337, 2 pm; BANA 489B, 4 pm /esse Tutor, Partner with Arthur Andersen and Company, Houston MGMT 466, 5 pm Carol C. McGuire, President, Loop Cold Storage, San Antonio Tuesday February 1 ACCT Conference, 10 am; ACCT 327, 2 pm Carroll Phillips, Managing Partner with Coopers & Lybrand, Houston Wednesday February 2 The Retailing Symposium, Rudder 601 MGMT 470, 11 am; MGMT 470, 12 noon Roy Serpa, Manager of Headquarters Commercial Development, Gulf Oil Chemicals Company Thursday February 3 MGMT 435, 11 am; MGMT 436, 12:30 pm Jim Garrison, Attorney, Texaco, U.S.A. Training for Gulf Oil Corporation. "We enjoyed our partidpation in the Business Career Fair last year," wrote Raul Cantu, Jr,, Senior Systems Analyst for Shell Oil Company. "We hope that we were able to give the students a good perspective as to career opportunities available with Shell Oil." "I recruit in a region of 30 states and attend similar functions in many schools," said John Harnett with Bank of America, Los Angeles, a veteran of three career fairs. "And Texas A&M's Business Career Fair is by far the most pro fessional and effective and im pressive I've ever seen." The activities, seminars, booths, and other events of the Fair are open to the public and will be of interest to students majoring in other fields as well as business. Speakers and Seminars Scheduled as Special Events in Career Fair Monday, January 31 "How Much Computerese Should A Graduate Know" Millie Bradley, Manager of Appli cations of Exxon Chemicals Time and place to be announced Tuesday, February 1 "Salesmanship" John Shafer, District Sales Mana ger, Southwestern Company Time and place to be announced "Changing Values in the Business World" Stan Madden, Assistant Professor of Marketing, Texas A&M University Time and place to be announced Wednesday, February 2 "How to Cope with Stress" Virgie Nolte, Counseling Psychol ogist, Health Center Time and place to be announced "A Graduate's Personal Finances" Willie Langston, Recruiter and Accountant, Coopers & Lybrand Past President of the CBA Busi ness Student Council Time and place to be announced Thursday, February 3 "The Future For Women in Busi ness" Darlene Mason, Manager of Cor porate Planning, United Gas Pipe line Time and place to be announced wimimiimiimmiimiMiimiiiiimiiiimiimimiiimiimiimiimiiiiimimiimiimmimiiimiiiiiiimimiiiiiiiimiimiiiiimiimiiiiiiiiiimiiimmim IIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIW Illllllllll Illllllllllllllllll Illllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllll Ill IIIIIIIHIIIIIIM '.Hi-: H;- HHcHWi