Monday, September 5,1983/The Battalion/Page 13 McCulla VOT OUR FINE POLItl IT WE TAKE ISSUE! vERCumm mn ontrol. so aomi fAT IF OUR CAKWH ,bbits, they Wi .E. TO BREED! iSouf/j Carolina Farmer donates vegetables to help needy folks 4" ieWsj Dirmeye £X3nT the/Send ■/\7VFI5Hhase, the GAOsai tired such a stuck d study of Roi pment potential y the GAO. Aboit Hill Country ()()() residents liven tin and one fifthi tolicies. ppled and electricity poles, destroyed iuti buildings and ambushed relief tea troops Sunday in a 10-hour bat tle to take El Salvador’s third :st city — one of the most ng attacks of the four-year war. aid FEMA plans xh consultant to Jt hich communitit >wn $70,000 studio ire the $8,0 naps and which at d for about United Press International SOUTH CHARLESTON, Y.Va. — The blazing sun beat a in into the face, shoulders and iack of Tony Halleman this ummer as he labored in the just west of South Char- iston. And Halleman said despite the searing heat and lack of wa ter that has killed many other gardens, the harvest remains rich on the 34-acre piece ofland. The property is owned by Bishop Joseph Hodges of the Catholic Diocese of Wheeling Charleston. “It’s a program that the bishop allowed us to use his properties to raise food for needy people,” said Halleman. “My wife and I did it just for the purpose of helping them. We’re not in the business of making any money.” Only two acres is actually under cultivation because that’s all the Hallemans thought they could handle when they turned the first spadeful of soil May 15. But next year, they hope to obtain help to triple the land under cultivation and to raise cattle and sheep to provide more food for such programs as Man na Meal and Christ’s Kitchen. Halleman, 54, balding but fit after a summer in the fields, is from St. Louis originally, but he moved to Charleston from Houston in 1964 to work at an electrical managers’ association job. He later got into the coal busi ness and now owns Sparkle En terprises Inc. at Nellis in Boone County. For a number of reasons, he said, the operation has been largely down for the last 18 months. “It’s a considerable size opera tion,” said Halleman. He hopes to get it started working some time in the near future. In the meantime, he plans to put 100 percent of his time and energy into farming for the poor. Rids need varied music United Press International WASHINGTON — Telling a to turn off the radio may the biggest mistake parents make in trying to get their offspring to appreciate some thing besides rock music, says a school dean. Demanding peace and quiet ay also be one of the worst ipproaches to teaching children ’ musical values, says Dean Thomas Mastroianni of the Catholic University of America Music School. In an informal survey, his music school professors were asked how parents can instill good musical values in their chil dren without forcing the kids to accept the parents’ preferences. Most agreed children should be exposed to many different kinds of music. Parents today often wonder why their children prefer rock and roll to most other musical forms. “It’s really no jjreat wonder that it captures their attention so completely,” says jazz lecturer Martin Peicuch. “Rock is so much more exposed today than other kinds of music.” Prof. Preston Trombly, who specializes in contemporary chamber music, believes chil dren should be introduced to new music in the normal course of the day. Children often learn by fol lowing their parents’ examples, Trombly says. If parents are open-minded about listening to unfamiliar compositions, their children will probably learn to be flexible, too. The key lies in exposing chil dren to music without dictating what they should like, he says — presenting music without mak ing value judgments. Musical exposure can range from lessons in school to listen ing to a piece of music and find ing out how the composer put it together. It also includes seeing and hearing live performances or playing in a band or an orchestra, singing in a choir or playing in a jazz ensemble. Third largest city by San guerrillas attacked Salvador United Press international A Salvadoran army spokes man said the rebels withdrew af ter a 10-hour assault but resi dents reported that scattered shooting continued late Sunday. The leftist guerrillas fought their way into the heart of San 1, 69 miles southeast of San Salvador, with fierce fight- reported at the downtown headquarters of the 3rd Infan try Brigade, residents said. "We’re surrounded by thousands of the bastards,” said one military officer based in San Miguel, a strategic city with 100,000 residents located in the province of the same name. A military official said at least i soldiers had died and 15 others were wounded since the attack began late Saturday. Just outside San Miguel, re bels ambushed two columns of relief forces from La Union, 25 southeast of San Miguel, but there was no immediate re port on casualties, one military sources said. Guerrillas blew up bridges to the two nearest cities, San Fran cisco Gotera and La Union, burned down the biggest coffee ill in eastern El Salvador and destroyed two office buildings in 12 hours of fighting, residents d. At the height of the attack, rebel sappers toppled electricity is, blacking out the pro- s of San Miguel, Usulutan, La Union and Morazan, which comprise 40 percent of El Salva dor's territory. if The scale of the raid on San 1 ranks it alongside such attacks of the nearly 4- year-old civil war as a January battle in Santa Ana, the country’s second largest city, a 1982 attack on the Ilopango air force base that destroyed 18 air craft, the 1981 destruction of the nearly mile-long Golden je and last February’s cap ture of the city of Berlin. U.S. Special Envoy Richard Stone, completing the first week of his latest diplomatic shuttle through the region, headed for Guatemala for talks with the new military leader, Gen. Oscar Humberto Mejia Victores. Nicaragua said it rebuffed Assistant Secretary of State for Latin America Langhorne Mot ley because he was not the bear er of any special message from President Reagan and because he changed the date of his plan ned visit. Motely, who replaced Tho mas Enders in a shakeup of Reagan’s Central American team, cancelled his Nicaragua visit when he learned that Junta Coordinator Daniel Ortega and Foreign Minister Miguel d’Esco- to would not meet with him. Motley flew to Costa Rica from Guatemala Saturday and planned to meet Sunday with President Luis Alberto Montt, a strong U.S. supporter. Radio Farabundo Marti, run by El Salvador’s Popular Libera tion Forces, denied that a man arrested by Salvadoran police took part in the May 25 assassi nation of Navy Lt. Cmdr. Albert Schaufelberger III. Petal Patch 707 Shopping Village 696 6713 College Station Petal Patch, foo /T TWO COMPLETE FLORIST Oak Village-Hwy. 30 764-0091 College Station Floyd’s Keg Shop Back-to-school-special! Lone Star or Old Mil $29.75 for a 16 gallon keg that is iced down and ready to go! c —extra— 50 lb. bag of Sparkle Ice $1.50 Floyd’s located at: Sparkle Ice Co. 701 N. Texas Ave., Bryan 822-6222 (Good thru 9/10/83) orts Close-out Every short in stock Reduced "£40% of? The season may be over but there's still l°Ts 0 ’ ,i hot weather yet to come. . Outfit yourself for class m . cool comfort. Ghoosefrom C c,Kiles for men4 women. over to styles v*-" @ Efforts of Soviet pilot described by official Before the Halleman’s took over, the land had been used by a group of Catholic brothers famous for their carrot cake. Halleman put together a plan to raise the food and asked the bishop to make the land avail able to him. Hodges agreed. “It’s a thing he and Joleen have talked about,” said the Rev. Joseph DeBias, parish priest of the Blessed Sacrament Parish in South Charleston. “For a couple of years they have wanted to do this.” DeBias said the initiative for the program was solely the Hal lemans’. “There was no big push in the parish, although there are some parishioners who help. I think for the parish there has become a greater awareness of it and a real sense of pride in what’s hap pening there,” said DeBias. United Press International MOSCOW — The head of Soviet air defense, calling Ko rean Air Lines flight 007 a deli berate and rude provocation, Sunday described the efforts of Soviet pilots who fired warning shots at the ill-fated airliner. The account was transmitted by the official Tass news agency and largely reiterated previous statements, none of which admitted shooting down the KAL flight last Thursday over the north Pacific. It was the first statement attributed to any specific Soviet political or military official ab out the incident in which 269 people died, including 61 Amer icans. Col. Gen. Semyon Romanov, chief of staff of the Soviet air defense command, said that one fighter pilot made repeated attempts for an unspecified but long period of time to direct the intruder plane to the nearest Soviet base. After failing to establish radio contact with the KAL flight, which was described as flying without navigation lights, the pilot fired warning shots parallel to the flight path, Romanov said. In an important refinement of Moscow’s previous explana tions, Romanov said the KAL jumbo jet “flew with exting uished lights and its outlines re semble much those of the Amer ican reconnaissance plane RS- 135. “Just in this year, American military planes nine times violated the airspace of the Soviet Union in the region of the Kurile Islands,” Romanov said. “Our interceptor pilot made warning shots with tracer shells along the course of the intruder plane to draw the crew’s atten tion to the gross violation of the airspace of another state,” he said. “Rules also provide for such a measure.” Previous Soviet statements admitted firing warning shots at an unidentified intruder plane but had not disclosed that the target was the KAL jumbo jet. Romanov’s remarks were transmitted by Tass in a news story format. Previous dispatch es appeared as policy statements by unidentified officials from within the Kremlin. Romanov’s account said he had spoken to reporters, but no Western correspondents were involved. Soviet journalists function in semi-official capaci ties as extensions of the govern ment and ruling Communist Party. “The plane seemed to be stalking under the cover of night above our territory,” Romanov said. “And there are no doubts that this was a deliberate action de signed as a rude provocation. It is not difficult to guess who and for what purpose needed this provocation.” Romanov said that after the KALjumbo jet failed to respond to attempts to establish radio contact, the Soviet pilot Hashed his aircraft’s lights and rocked its wings. “Neither waggling nor Hashing, however, brought the necessary result,” he said. “The intruder plane continued the flight in night conditions at the height of 8,000 to 10,000 meterfc above the territory of the Soviet Union.” Flarlier statements by the Soviets indicated the unidenti fied plane continued on its flight in the direction of the Sea of Japan after the warning shots were fired and that radar con tact was lost within about 10 mi nutes: Want to Fly? Now is the best time ever. Our rates have never been this low. Enroll in our private pilot course before Oct. 1 and pay only 37 00 /Hour for dual instruction 25 00 /Hour for solo flight Start flying now. 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