Wednesday, July 20, 1983/The Battalion/Page 11 Sentence pleases family ~am non latus yet-* ball meeting adrunnerscs on how"m Ik andven cation ofN, L*rsity ofTfu i could bepn rector Fred not only lot mio, also, cl for Hi no less schools, ont |() and the athleticcomp Son receives probation United Press International HOUSTON — With hugs from jurors and handshakes from prosecutors, a son, 26, was sentenced to three years of probation for shooting his comatose father in an attemp ted mercy killing. The jurors Monday still made it clear they did not con done euthanasia and sent enced Billy Ray Clore to one year of probation more than the minimum sentence for his attempted murder conviction. “I’m relieved,” said Clore, who had testified he shot his father in the head to fulfill a promise not to let him suffer. “I’m pleased with the verdict.” Even before he was con victed Friday, sympathetic prosecutors R.K. Hansen and Dick Bax had said they would not try to send Clore to prison. After he was sentenced they shook his hand and wished him well. Juror Phyllis Massie said that extra year of proba tion was important. “We didn’t want it to appear that we were condoning mercy killing,” she said. “Mercy kill ing cannot be condoned.” Billy Ray’s brother, Bob, 31, when asked what his father’s reaction would have been to the sentence, said, “He (Robert Clore) loved all of us but never would have wanted this (trial) for Billy.” He said the case should never have been prosecuted. “Billy is not a criminal,” he said. Billy Clore said he just wanted to go back to the fami ly tire dealership in nearby Spring, which he and his father, Robert Clore, 63, ran for years before the elder Clore fell deathly ill in November 1982. The son shot his father on March 21 after the elder Clore remained comatose for four months following kidney fai lure and two heart seizures. Robert Clore died 2V2 weeks after the shooting. The charge against Billy Ray was reduced Friday from murder to attempted murder when prosecutors got infor mation the shooting may not have killed him. The elder Clore’s attending physician said death was caused by con gestive heart failure. Two disappear during survival training trip United Press International ROCHFORD, S.D. — Deputy sheriffs searched the Black Hills for two Massachusetts boys mis sing on what the local sheriff cal led an “irresponsible” overnight survival trip. Civil defense workers halted their search at dusk Monday and planned to rejoin the deputies Tuesday. Christopher Estas, 13, and Erik Laub, 11, both of West Newton, Mass., last were seen Friday night at the Black Fox campground near Rochford. The boys were equipped only with one-day food packs, sleep ing bags and blankets. Pennington County Sheriff Don Holloway criticized the sur vival group leader, Daniel Senecal, for the trip. “I think he was irresponsible to turn those kids loose in the Black Hills in the first place,” Holloway said. “I don’t know what he was trying to accom plish. He had 31 kids and he did that with all of them.” Holloway said the boys had no maps or compasses in an area that is heavily forested, with thick underbrush and large creeks. “I feel horrible and devas tated by the whole thing,” Senec al said. But he denied “absolute ly” he had acted irresponsibly. Senecal is a sixth grade teacher of life sciences at Fessen den School, a private schobl in Newton, Mass. He said he has been leading trips to the area around Rapid City for 14 years. Erik’s father, Albert Laub, said he was surprised Erik joined the optional survival training part of the trip. The survival exercise began Friday night. White collar training supported * Oil United Press International NEW YORK — Improved lining of white collar workers m Eddvan ' s a ^ e V 1:0 success in modern kill. Nottlt American business, says William icoldsten Sandy of Southfield, Mich., who Rattlen bi ^ as himself a big business i lot ofspntl 10 ' 11 ^ j ust that - The Game«.‘ Mone y s P ent on training white collar workers is the best leveraged investment a com- State-FullenB n y can ma k e >” Sandy said, is well as sei®' nce ^ to ^ percent of every etore the! com P an y s ex P enc htures are in payroll, improving the produc- llnlaversco frty of the workers through ssive blo^®‘ nin 8 P a y s of ^ handsomely.” us' supers® a ru * e> he said, investment 1 , j in training results in more lever- i HeTj®,. th “" ! " .inuandil “ There really are only three investment ways a company can expand its business: through new products and processes, by advertising and promotion and by im proved productivity through training,” he said. The first two of these cost a fortune compared to the cost of training. “White collar training is the new frontier,” Sandy told Un ited Press International. “Blue collar training in America al ways has been good. The unions’ apprentice system and the disci pline imposed by the assembly line assured that, but much white collar training has been neglected or hit-or-miss.” He said the video display ter minal and other electronic office machines are imposing some of the discipline on office workers that the apprentice system and the assembly line imposed on blue collar workers. “But there’s still a lot to be done,” he added. “Many of our businesses have no history of efficient white collar training. Industries that only recently have been subjected to severe competition are likely to have neglected training of white col lar workers. Their manage ments tend to panic when they are first confronted with the problem. They look for short cuts but finally have to face up to the need for intensive worker training.” Sandy organized his training firm, Sandy Corp., in 1971. He had come to Detroit 20 years earlier from Baltimore to join the Jam Handy Organization which makes commercial and in dustrial films, many of them training films. When he left Handy he took 58 people with him, but Jamison Handy, founder of Jam Handy, was not dismayed. He even put some money into Sandy’s busi ness because he thought Sandy’s ideas about better training methods would satisfy a great need. “Our business is 98 percent professional skill, wide know ledge of the technological needs of various businesses and of how to train workers to fulfill them,” he said. “The other 2 percent is inspiration; perhaps you could call it magic.” Most of the activity of Sandy Corp. boils down to communica tion in one form or another — brochures, lectures, slides, film strips or what have you. But San dy says he has discovered in the videodisc the most comprehen sive and flexible of all training tools. He says his firm has produced about 150 videodisc programs. He also has helped General Motors set up 3,000 videodisc training centers around the country. “The videodisc and a videod isc player give you a two-way au dio-visual training system with stop-and-go retrieval and dia logue between teacher and worker that no other medium can provide,” he said. OCT. 1 MCAT THERE'S STILL TIME TO PREPARE. Educational Center TEST PREPARATION SPECIALISTS SINCE 1938 707 Texas Ave. 301-C In Dallas: 11617 N. Central Expwy. Call Days Evenings & Weekends Classes Scheduled To Start July 23 August 6 Call 696-3196 for details [Tobacco promotion protested owers croMf ie Recruit ii| ;h School ini at Verbumif IIlie Id- Al.-p,. u n it e d Press International ETROIT — Philip Morris is using candy, toys and movies in a campaign to get young people ing until to smoke, and the government talented en ought to stop it, the operators of jumps (1 a commercial stopsmoking tinners coi|^ 0 g ram sa y. I Grace and Damon Reinbold of East Lansing said Monday ;Game—f they filed a complaint with the ig, however,• ( j era i Trade Commission yrksinthe; against Philip Morris Inc., War- e sports-hn net Communications i nc . anc l seasons^ Time-Life Inc., all headquar- o show amir tere j i n New York. r The suit asks for a halt to showing cigarettes on television, m develop^ | w let’s seeirtf note *43 in movies, on album covers and on other objects which appeal to children and teenagers. In Washington, the FTC de clined comment on the com plaint. “We discovered that Marl boro cigarettes are seen at least 22 times in Superman II, often during times of intense action, but always with a well-planned direction and detail,” Reinbold said. He said this is only one inst ance of tobacco companies’ efforts to encourage young peo ple to smoke and to establish brand-name identification among children. The Reinbolds, who operate the Damon & Grace anti smoking program, displayed nearly two dozen examples of tobacco company promotion aimed at children. The Reinbolds said they hope the FTC will establish youth marketing guidelines for tobac co companies and other promo ters of cigarettes. Reinbold said he believes his complaint is the first filed with the FTC by a commercial stop smoking program. The complaint alleges that: •Time-Life, promoted smok ing in a children’s program cal led “Braingames” by showing a full-size Marlboro billboard “just long enough to implant the brand name firmly in the sub conscious of children who watched this popular program.” •Warner Communications, through Warner Brothers Re cords, produced an Eric Clapton album entitled “Money & Cigarettes.” Clapton is shown with cigarettes on the album cov er. His concert tour is being sup ported financially by the maker of Camel cigarettes. Study warns against ^-gravity boot usage JOIN THE United Press International ■ NEW YORK — Hanging up side down in gravity inversion boots — a health fad practiced by as many as 1 million Amer icans — may be dangerous for people with hypertension, glaucoma or spinal problems, rsddV researchers say. ' I A study published Monday in *nu selecP' the Journal of the American it r repted 775'' 1 Osteopathic Association was rted by a doctor who won- lered why he got dizzy when acticing the inversion erapy. Dr. Ronald Klatz’ found the Jlood pressure of 20 young DtiflQ FOOt!b ea Ithy subjects, 18 males and FT I Tit 0 f ema l es > rose on average PIUS I “{from 119 systolic and 74 diasto le to 157-93. Pressure within the Jye went up, too, when the P.lwolunteers, ages 22 to 33, were verted. Klatz found his own blood pressure skyrocketed from 125- p5 to 210-165 as a result of being Upside down. >ased to 7:C ESDAY SPECIAL ried Steak n Gravy otatoes and one other ■table -ead and Brt or Tea “Because of the significant elevations in systemic and cen tral retinal arterial blood press ures, pulse rate, and intraocular pressure reported in these ex periments, it is our recommen dation that caution should be observed in the prescription of the use of inversion boots,” the report said. “Our findings cause us to spe culate that this fad could be potentially dangerous for any one with glaucoma, hyperten sion, a weakness in a blood vessel wall (and) individuals on anti coagulants or aspirin therapy, or people with spinal instability.” Gravity boots, metal and foam rubber ankle clamps with hooks in front, fasten legs onto a hori zontal bar over a user’s head, re sulting in hanging upside down. About 1 million Americans use gravity inversion therapy and pay from $80 to $1,500 for inversion systems that utilize gravity to decompress spine disks and stretch back muscles. ADD-A-BEAD WHOLESALE CLUB V2 PRICE Until Nov. 30, 1983 Come in and join the Club for $10 fee & a purchase of $39.00. This will enable you to get all the add-a- beads you’ve wanted at Vz price until Nov. 30, 1983. %< [FINE JEWEL1 415 University 846-5816 67^9* PHOTO SPECIAL ECIAL ENINC ■ Butte: of any Summer Savings on Movie/ Slide Processing $■159 \ I Super 8-8mm 20 exp. slides 36 exp. slides $ 2.59 Kodachrome, Ektachrome, Fujichrome Prints from Slides 49* each Standard size — No enlargements Offer good through August 30,1983 4 VUI I S 114 14 4 I SIII INC. 401 University Dr. 846-1688 0locm Serving Luncheon Buffet Sunday through Friday | tatimo ovris foM 1} 11 a.m. to 1.30 p.m. Delicious Food Beautiful View Open to the Public ^ “Quality First” ^