Page 14/The BattalionTThursday, September27,1| THE BAR£AriAn PRESENTED BY: 4r MSC CEPHEID THIEF WARRIOR GLADIATOR KING VARIABLE THURS. SEPT. 27 8:00 Sc 10:30 pm THEGROVE $1.50 Call 845-1515 (j in case of rain Call Battalion Classified Excessive lead found in blood United Press International DALLAS -— Health officials have tested more than 100 chil dren who live near a lead smelter and have found that a quarter of them, including a toddler hospi talized for lead poisoning, have excess lead in their blood. t he survey, conducted bv the city's Health and Human Services Department, examined children living near the Dixie Metals smelter in south Dallas and found that 20 of 102 children ages 0 vears and younger had elevated lead lev els. bvv ent v-tvvo-mont h-old Pat ricia Flores, who had been seen eating dirt in her front vard near the smelter, was identified during the survey as an “urgent-risk” case and immediately hospital ized in Parkland Memorial Hos pital. She was listed in fair condi tion Weclnesdav. The survev also identified four other children as moderate to high t isk cases, HITS of ficial Margo Branscomb said. The survey results came at the same time state District judge Dee Brown Walker of Dallas is sued a temporary’ restraining or der prohibiting the opening of a second lead smelter in the city. He said the issue has not been ef- fectivelv addressed. Citv officials contend the facilitv does not com- plv with c itv zoning ordinances. “I don't know vvhv thev (Mur mur Corp.) want to get that thing started out there," Walker said Tuesday. "It seems like it would lead to another mess." I he restraining order was signed over the protest of Mur mur officials who were autho rized Monday by state District judge Nathan Hecht to open the plant. Murmur bought the giant smelter in west Dallas from RSR Corp. in Mav for $25,000 and has invested $400.000 in pollution- control equipment to complv with a federal order to clean up the smelter and to pav for the re moval of lead-contaminated soil nearbv . Thomas Kurt, a member of the citv environmental health com mission, said he was not con vinced the lead levels were linked to the smelter. "I wouldn't necessarily become an alarmist at the information,’’ he said. " I here are other factors to be looked into.” He noted that many Hispanic: families in the area use a popular Mexican folk remedy that cron- tains a high lev el of lead oxides. Accused abductors in coy United Press International AMSTKRDAM. Netherlands — 1 hree men accused of kidnapping the Dutch beer magnate Freddie Heineken and extorting an $1 1 mil lion ransom went on trial Wednes day. Heineken familv members, rela tives of the defendants and curious onlookers crowded into a courtroom tigged with bullet-proof glass screens to hear testimonies of the months of meticulous planning be hind the abduction of one of Fu- rope's t ie best men. Heineken, the (>()-year-old head of the world's fourth largest brew ery, was kidnapped at gunpoint Nov. I) outside his Amsterdam of fice. His driver. Ah Doderer, 58, also was kidnapped. 1 he pan was taken to an isolated timber warehouse, where thev were chained to the walls of specially built, sound-proof cells for 21 days. Hei neken and Doderer were found by police 48 hours after the brewery paid a ransom estimated at SI 1 mil lion. 1 he three Dutch defendants are Jan Boellard, $5; Martin F.rkamps, 21: and Frans Meijer, 30. I hey were ; nested in a nationwide manhunt, during which police recovered about SO million of the ransom. The re mainder is still missing. Under Dutch law, there are no jury trials and defendants are not asked to plead guilty or not guilty. If convicted, however, the three could face jail sentenc es of up to Hi years. AT A THEATRE NEAR YOU. Presiding judge (>. ffodeiil: opened the trial with a suinimrl the c ase and then called ErkampjB the stand as the* first of the three* fendants to testify. Frkanipsgatj statement detailing his sine of* store before defense and pros** tion arguments. Lrkamps said preparationsbT live months before the kidnappiiJ but in the' beginning he wasuniujl of the* spec ific nature of thecrirl being planned. "I liad no idea the whole time iJ all this planning was lor a kidnJ ping, ' F.rkamps said. "I reckoned* were going to do a bank joborson thing like that." F.rkamps said he was promtej about S300.<)()() for stealing mobiles and for helping to purdJ West ('.erinan intercoms that kn® used in the* tin heated cells i in id H eineken and Doderer wereimpitl nned. After Frkumps discovered cl crime involved a kidnapping,heal he* realized "there was just noguJ bac k at lhat stage." He said he helped takecaryt)!* two c aptiv es aftei the abduction. I "I bioiiglu them l(K>d, cooked nivsell every morningac rvciv evening." Frkainps sai(l.“^A when 1 had to speak to them, ispofl in Cei nian to hide my identity.IziP; had rm head covered so theycqfl mit see mv lace."* p Uouit ol t ic ials said Heinekena:® his chivei were not exoected l(n*| peat m the trial UTT IMtBtM ATRES I1.2S rw in »uaioomcu™ 0«»*t » Svs iiMMMifi*. cnu*«t i. *OTH THlATMt O^tN AT 1:41 cacozzaci pmai |31» COLLgOE N. 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