Monday, March 26, 1984/The Battalion/Page 11 id people," Hon engineer fri, , was freed In d last Deceult 1 brought in rblicity. NAA( AUSTIN — Public Utility i in Geter'slj Commission Chairman Al Er vin is expected to resigrr May 1 ind open an Austin office of public relations firm he give Mr. Go vorketl for before his appoint- o’s welcoraei nent to the PUC last year. Erwin declined to confirm or eny reports that he will leave |re three-member utility regu- atory agency after the PUC PUC chairman Erwin expected to resign United Press International AUSTIN — Public Ueter deserve e” for hisordti o Robert Goa referring to | held captive month after down overSt completes work on Southwes- ons in Lebaij ern Bell Telephone’s $1.3 bil ion rate case in late April or :arly May. . B But Erwin confirmed he has old Gov. Mark White repeat- I IVrll dly that he does not intend to erveout his full six-year term. don’t like the job,” he aid.'I’ve never made any bones [bout it. I’m hurting financially ind I’d rather be elsewhere.” The Dallas Times Herald re- mmiltee, abt l0rtec i Saturday that White’s ffice has recently reopened its es for appointments to the ommission. ) ffice and G n campaign i formation fn sis. The H« rgan withdisd . Sources told UPI that White ter that mateii i s interested in appointing debate bnelir* te Reagan Id Albosta,! in of the i fall that I black or Hispanic to the com mission, and that Associate Commissioner Peggy Rosson of El Paso would probably be pro moted to chairman. The Times Herald said the leading candidates to succeed Erwin appear to be Dennis Thomas, who directs manage ment and budget in the gover nor’s office; Rafael Quintanilla, director of the Texas Depart ment of Community Affairs and a former PUC hearing ex aminer; and Don Butler, a law yer for the Texas Municipal League in utility rate cases. Erwin, 38, resigned as vice president and Houston office manager for Hill and Knowlton Inc., to accept White’s appoint ment to the $58,000-a-year PUC post in February 1983. He and Rosson were ap pointed within hours alter the surprise resignations of two of former Gov. William P. Clem ents Jr.’s appointees, George Cowden and Tommie Gene Smith. One of the reasons Erwin is expected to remain in Austin is that his wife, Gay, was ap pointed by White last year as ex ecutive director of the newly created Governor’s Gommission on Women. Bob Dilenschneider, chief of U.S. operations for Hill and Knowlton, said earlier that Er win had asked to return to the company after serving on the PUC and the company wanted him back. If Erwin leaves the PUC, it would he the second time he has resigned from the agency with out completing his full term. Erwin, one of the first appoin tees to the commission after its creation in 1975, served a pre vious stint from 1976 until 1979. On his second appointment, Erwin told reporters: “Bore- - dom I don’t think is going to be a problem this time — unfortu nately. I wish it would be, but it’s not going to be.” When he resigned in 1979, Erwin said the PUC was run ning smoothly and no longer presented a challenge. ledical records ‘irrelevant’ United Press International a in r r lfl SAN ANTONIO —Prosecu- mceotan t; t(|rs F r i,j a y sa j ( { none of the by t " e " ej n 1,000 boxes of medical records obtain Car^ are( j f rom a shredder last eek could be relevant to an in stigation of infant deaths at edical Center Hospital. Special prosecutor Nick othe, in a hearing to facilitate ispostion of the unneeded ocuments, told State District dge Pat Priest that the grand jury had released the records r disposal. Attorneys Tom Sharp and T is prep ailing this eff said Sundav | ze the poorn ■agan’s top c ibout the C affidavit i District Attorney Sam Millsap obtained a temporary re straining order last week to halt destruction of the records, claiming they included mem- orandi. X-rays and CAT scans of at least two children who died in the hosptial’s pediatric intensive care unit. The records were ordered destroyed by the Health Science Center, which provides staffing and administration for MCH. Ms. Jones, who attended the hearing, is charged with injur ing 4-month-old Rolando San tos with an injection of heparin, a blood-thinning drug, while she worked in the pediatric unit. jbcommittcfj Cynthia King said their client, have no brt by the residential jody associ •aign, to ol ■ administrai 'ed -equipped g! 1 in most of the tests, ren’t up to ’ he sail Police Beat e University of Texas Health cience Center, had no objec- on to the irrelevant documents ing destroyed. However, it was unclear hether the documents would Carter-Mondiilje destroyed immec 1 ialely. tpaign, anypip Defense attorney Royal Grif- ■ informatmifin, who represents vocational nurse Genene Jones, said he had not yet determined whether any of the records will needed for her defense on harges of injury to a child. Priest gave Griffin permis- ion to look through the 25 tons if medical records, but the at- orney responded that “Her- ules would not have a shovel lere were“d® r S e enough” to go through K ets” probltt P em a M- Griffin said the re- system He* ordscould remain at a San An- it the problen onio recycling company “until Accounting Wl freezes over ” ■ssional inves the Pentaj alyze the el nd fielding t ith its defid(_ The following incidents were e Smith,D-fk reported to the University Po re Department through Sun- ay* MISDEMEANOR THEFT: • A student’s wallet con- mded'the Si aining her driver’s license, stu- n an earlier! lent I.D. card, $18 in cash and istatingly efft ; e V er al credit cards was stolen id pointed »■; fr° m her purse, which was left ie responsibili Una Prtided on a table on the ty dencienciel fourth floor of the Sterling C. ans to buy 6! Evans Library. :h are equippi * A woman’s wallet, con- et-mountedi pining her staff I.D. card, $20 in cash and several credit cards Ijvas stolen from an unlocked " desk drawer in 432 Blocker. TERRORISTIC THREAT: • Someone called the Uni- jersity Police Department and plied a bomb had been faced in Bolton Hall. Officers who searched the building Chili found not ling. apon has dti red by the D m’s Operatio: tion Agency. Icials said. Hall’s mal Off \ m ATTENTION ALL GENERAL STUDIES STUDENTS PLEASE COME BY 101 ACADEMIC BUILDING TO PICK UP YOUR PRE-REGISTRATION WORKSHEET. nailery Datsun 1219 s. College Bryan, Texas DO IT RIGHT*! SIKH products rigicTenghieLing sp ® ci,i yp^gl'your 1 St'S r treatment it deserves. mmma car C ar E p RODUC Parts & Service Open Thursday Nights ui 775-1 son Integer 449, itional infor hncrl CO CO Ui oc a. 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Reg. $4.68 dz. quartet Mark ‘IT’ Wipe Board* 18 x 84 $14.38 Reg $17,96 84 x 38 $88.38 Reg. $27.95 Pentel Sharp Automatic Pencils P80BA $3.18 Reg $3.98 O.B mm Pencil Leade 600 Reg so* (H,HB,B) Panasonic Electric Sharpener j£pjQQ $88.98 Reg. $29.95 3M Tape 810 - */« x 1896 $1.98 Reg. $2.45 810 - >/• x 1896 $1.49 Reg. $1.87 Swingline Desk Stapler 711 (Black A Beige) $7.98 Reg. $9.96 SF3 Staples $8.80 Reg. $3.25 Bolodex Card Pile VIP84C - Black $16.98 Reg. $20,95 ENGIlSrEERING fi* 01^0® e3 9883 1418 Texas Ave. 8., Redmond Terrace Shoppy* center, EDB standards called lax United Press International AUSTIN — The director of a 4,000-member food co operative Friday predicted there will be an another 10 to 15 cancer deaths among his membership if current Texas guidelines on exposure to the pesticide EDB remain in ef fect. “We feel that’s outra geous,” Brad Rockwell of the Austin-based Wheatsville Co operative said in a Texas Health Department public hearing. The Health Board will vote in May on permanent stan dards for human exposure to ethylene dibromide, a power ful cancer-causing substance used to fumigate grains and citrus. EDB has been widely used since the 1940s. The state board adopted emergency standards in Feb ruary that mirror those rec ommended by the federal Environmental Protection Agency. The EPA acted after the substance, identified in 1974 as causing cancer in labo ratory animals, began ap pearing in food and water supplies in many states, in cluding Texas. State health officials were urged during the hearing Fri day to strengthen Texas’e- mergency guidelines, which they say dp not go far enough in protecting consumers. “I think the EPA has been extremely lax and overly con cerned with the effects on the corporate food industry,” said Rockwell. “Basically they (EPA) are subsidizing the cor porate food industry with people’s health.” Rockwell said the state should test a wider range of products to determine con tamination by EDB and other dangerous substances. “We have all these prod ucts in our store, but we can not, tell our customers whether they’re contami nated or not,” he said. Tani Adams, director of the Texas Pesticide Watch, said the Health Department had tested some 800 products and found 300 contained some level of EDB. “Only a few dozen have ac tually been recalled,” she said. “There are hundreds of ‘ products that have EDB, but are below the Health Depart ment levels.” ' — I Under the emergency stan- I dards adopted by the Health Board in February, ready-to- eat foods, including raw fruits, can contain no more than 30 parts per billion of EDB. The level for food to be cooked and unprocessed grains products is 150 ppb and for unprocessed raw grains it is 900 ppb. /yj It’s All Happening At Hoffbrau! A new look, a new menu, a new happy hour and plenty of good times are waiting for you at the new Hoffbrau. Restaurant Specials Fried Cheese Deep fried mozzarella sticks served with our special Italian sauce. Chili-Cheese Burger 6 oz. choice top sirloin with homemade chili and grated Cheddar. 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