The Battalion. (College Station, Tex.) 1893-current, September 02, 1983, Image 11

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    Friday, September 2,1983/The Battalion/Page 11
-voman
i homtPA makes progress
else to go, I
;have myself,’’ boj
Char Rothrock said;
to evict the woman.
responsibility go
ic individual. Welai
:o consideration all
board president H
I, though heexprast
e housing authori
ilities to deal with
imuels.
ard member, Zintt
ned against the w
g“manyoftheel(M
is"
Jeamtp funds up
United Press International
JALLAS — Though he was
uctant to judge his predeces-
s, Environmental Protection
ency deputy administrator
Aim said the agency has
demuch greater progress in
handling of contaminated
Aim, in Dallas Wednesday
board a crowded i
or the grocery store
van driver later (
he saw the |
never pointed
at him. But Jean
s, the manager ofi
said Samuels in the p
atened other reside
gun, and in one in . .. rn . ■ ,
ed another reside! an jeeting with EPA regional
"cials, also said the agrm \
spend $400 million of its
rerfund cleanup money in
' His statement came a day
;ore the agency was to add a
ntber of waste sites to its su-
rfund list.
Aim declined to say whether
)pei
;ls, who lives alone
rtment, has said i
e gun because shel
uilted in her home,
ousing authority mt
1 little sympathy I
individual plight.
ad lived at Allen Pj •p exas s j tes wou ] c j | 3e on t } ie
^ e i„.° r .„ •! ar I Sa ". 1 wlist, but he did say toxic sites
military installations would
included.
He praised the agency and its
administrator, William
Ruckelshaus, for the progress
made in the handling of toxic-
wastes, but refused to condemn
former EPA chief Anne Bur-
ford for her handling of the
agency.
“I think the performance of
the agency has been good,” Aim
said. Aim, who replaced Dr.
John Hernandez, also declined
comment on lead contamination
in east Dallas. Hernandez was
criticized for slowing the
cleanup of lead-contaminated
soil in Dallas.
“I would not like to comment
on the Dallas lead situation for
obvious reasons, because it’s in
court,” Aim said.
Aim attributed changes in the
administrative policies at EPA in
freeing millions of dollars of Su-
perfund money to clean up toxic
waste sites.
“It terms of renewal actions,
Ms may be developing
obsession with slimness
up asks
lages
Press Intemationil
1RAUNFELS -
merican group tla
rther prosecutiono
jrivate for the ““
aths of four faml
says an agreemeJ
hursdav would eml
>r another trial
liam Dale Savagelu
en convicted of u
lanslaughter for ill!
uben Saucedo,
along with his pre
and two children)!
along a road in
ist October.
, the $5,000 fineanJ
rbated sentence
4 outrage from tilt
:ommunity, whicl
) seek another tral
that Savage was re-
ir the other family,
eaths,
iday night the vie-
Uniled Press International
BOSTON — Youngsters
isessed with being “slim-and-
im’ are developing an eating
sorder possibly linked to
iiorexia nervosa that stunts
ieir growth and delays puber-
, doctors warned Thursday.
“We call it ‘Fear of Obesity
ndrome,”’ said Dr. Fima Lif-
liu of North Shore University
iospital in Manhasset, N.Y.
Lifshitz and his team of
lysicians reported in the New
igland Journal of Medicine
e discovery of the condition
be a mild variant or pre-
irsorto the starvation disease
norexia.
“The children don’t eat
lough because they fear they
iget fat. And then they hurt
themselves. They could stunt
their growth permanently.
They’re casualties of this whole
slim-and-trim, stay-fit philo
sophy.”
He said the children his
group studied generally were
overachievers, came from fit
ness-conscious families and a
third had parents or siblings
who were obese.
Lifshitz said the condition is
not as pathological as anorexia,
which affects an estimated half
million Americans who starve
themselves while thinking they
are fat, but if left untreated it
may be a precursor to it.
Of more than 200 youngsters
who went to the hospital’s
Growth Clinic for being slow-
growers or having delayed pu-
Balding wrestler loses wig,
mtch, sues wig company
United Press International
SALEM, MaSs. ! — A balding
i'testleEwho lost his hair-
iece and his match in a tele-
isedbout filed a $200,000 suit
s and members of F tlhe flrrn that made his
tee For Justice For
Steven A. Grabowski said he
iffered “severe emotional dis-
;ess”when his opponent yank-
doffhis hairpiece to the laugh-
grand,scorn of his fans.
1 a settlement
1 that called for Sav-
guilt for the other
>ay damages to th(
reement would not
til approved byDiv
arl Anderson, who
pre-trial motion!
trial “would justj
ame wounds," sal/
., a member of thi
or Justice For
good faith to
ed art
n
.ss International
DNIO — A colot
by Henri de
tree worth up tij
stolen from thj
luseum in broad
officials said
JH
cials said the valuf
h, entitled “Mar-
En Buste,” which
195, was taken be-
I 5 p.m. Tuesday,
as not discovered
ay.
also took the
st list, which all
sign and which;
ealed the chiefs
Is said. |j:
ers) aren’t rtiil
but they under-?
rums are vainer-*
aid curator* Nor-
he work was on
Torn anonymous
as familiar with
:rgeson said, be*
:d a card saying
rarily removed”
exiglass frame.
)h was valued at
ing to police re*
son said an exact
;en determined,
the first prints
by Toulouse*
miginal work,
police say they
s, and the FBI
d of the theft,
mpany was ex
reward for the
return latef
i know
iternational
e double coco 1
is much as 40
Grabowski, '\vho went by
“Steve Thunder" on the wrest
ling circuit, sued Hair Replace
ment System of Manchester,
N.H. in Salem Superior Court
Wednesday.
The complaint said Grabow-s-
ki had lost a great deal of his hair
in years on the wrestling mat be
cause opponents would pull,
grab and twist the strands.
So on June 18, Grabowski
paid $750 for a 2 , /2-hour hair
replacement process. The com-
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HELLO, SARAH, THESE ARE /AY
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AND PAUL STORAV THEY'RE
JOINING THE TV STATION
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AH, YES, WELCOME. WE'VE
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we have increased that man
yfold, compared to before,
which was virtually none,” Aim
said.
He also attributed cleanup
progress to a less stringent re
quirement for state financial
assistance and credited White
House cooperation with aiding
the agency’s progress.
“The support we get at EPA
couldn’t have been better,” Aim
said.
He said the EPA requested a
$265 million budget increase for
1984 and the White House
agreed. The increase would in
clude financing for the creation
of 1,100 more jobs at EPA, he
said.
Aim also said the agency cur
rently was studying proposed
revisions of the Clean Air Act.
“I don’t think the Clean Air
Act will be relaxed," Aim said.
WHAT? JWAIT A MINUTE,( HEE
YOU TOLD US... 1 HEE
COMPARE f COMPARE I COMPARE k COMPARE
Compare the cost of a
complete meal at the
Memorial Student Cen
ter with the cost of a
similar meal anywhere
else.
Compare the cost of a
complete evening meal at
the Memorial Student Cen
ter with the cost of a ham
burger, cola, and french
fries anywhere else.
Compare the nutritional
value of an evening meal at
the Memorial Student Cen
ter with a snack for the
same or similar price
anywhere else.
Compare the cost of an
evening meal at the Memo
rial Student Center
Cafeteria with the cost of a
meal prepared at home.
Many agree that it is less
expensive to dine at the
MSC.
IF YOU CAN FIND A BETTER OFFER, LET US KNOW
OPEN
MON.-SAT. 6:30-7 p.m.
SUN. 7 a m.-7 p.m.
"QUALITY FIRST”
OPEN
MON.-SAT. 6:30-7 p.m.
SUN. 7 a.m.-7 p.m.
"QUALITY FIRST”
OPEN
MON-SAT
6:30 A.M.-7:00 P.M.
SUN 7:00 A M.-7:00 P.M.
“QUALITY FIRST”
OPEN
MON.-SAT. 6:30-7 p.m.
SUN. 7 a.m.-7 p.m.
"QUALITY FIRST”
berty, 14 between the ages of 9
and 17 were found healthy ex
cept they did not eat enough for
fear of getting fat. Nine of the
children were boys and five were
girls.
“That’s a 7 percent figure,
which is very large, so this condi
tion might be prevalent,” Lif
shitz said.
The 14 children looked up to
four years younger than they
were, were between 5 percent
and 23 percent underweight for
their age, were extremely short
and had a two-to-five-year delay
in their sexual development, he
said.
“When a youngster doesn’t
eat properly, all his nourish
ment goes into maintaining him
self,” Lifshitz said.
THE UNDERGROUND
(SBISA DINING CENTER BASEMENT)
NOW OPEN
plaint said he was repeatedly
assured the wig would he fixed
tightly to his real hair.
Four days later in a bout in
Allentown, Pa., his opponent
grabbed his hair and the wig was
yanked off before an audience
of 2,500 fans and thousands of
television viewers worldwide.
Grabowski said he lost his
concentration and was defeated
in two matches that night. He
also claimed his career has suf
fered.
UNDERGROUND DELI
UNDERGROUND SNACKS
AND STORE
AND GAMES
★ DOUGHNUTS—SWEET ROLLS
★ HAMBURGERS—FRENCH FRIES
★ EGGS—BACON
★ ICE CREAM—CONES—CUPS
★ BISCUITS—SAUSAGE
★ SANDWICHES—SNACKS
★ SANDWICHES—SOUPS
★ NACHOS—TACOS
★ SALADS—SALADS—SALADS
★ COOKIES—CANDIES
★ HOT LINKS—BARBECUE
★ BURRITOS—ENCHILADAS
★ PACKAGED AND CANNED SNACKS
★ VARIETY MEATS—CHEESE
★ PERSONAL ITEMS—ASPIRIN
★ POOL TABLES—GAMES
BREAKFAST—7:30 a.m.-10:30 a.m.
11:00 a.m.-11:00 p.m. MON.-FRI.
LUNCH—10:30 a.m.-3:30 p.m.
4:00 p.m.-11:00 p.m. SUNDAY
MON.-FRI.
TAKE OUT FOODS
QUALITY FIRST”
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