The Battalion. (College Station, Tex.) 1893-current, February 20, 1985, Image 10

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    I FLU TREATMENT IS HERE
A study using the new drug Ribavirin
is going on at the Beutel Health Center
If you have Flu Symptoms
- Fever
- Muscle Aches
- Chills
- Sore Throat
Come to the health Center within the first 24
hours of illness and ask for the Flu Doctors (day
or night-Flu Fighters don’t sleep)
HOCH
Page 1 OAThe Battalion/Wednesday, February 20, 1985
You may win a paid vacation (about $112.00) in the Health Center
Dr. John Quarles
845-1313
VQBfXm
PUT A LITTLE AGGIE
IN EVERY TEXAN.
PUT A LITTLE TEXAN
IN EVERYONE.
AGGIE BLOOD DRIVE
Thursday is Last Day
RUDDER FOUNTAIN 10 a.m.-6 p.m.
PAVILLION 10 a.m.-3 p.m.
SBISA 10 a.m.-6 p.m.
COMMONS 10 a.m,-8 p.m.
APO
STUDENT
GOVERNMENT
OPA
Battalion Classified 845-2611
WORLD AMD NATION
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Shultz calls Sandinistas
‘bad news governmenf
Associated Press
WASHINGTON — Secretary of
State George Shultz on Tuesday de
scribed the Sandinista leadership in
Nicaragua as a “bad news govern
ment” and said the Reagan adminis
tration is determined to prevent the
permanent installation of a Soviet-
dominated regime anywhere in Cen
tral America.
“I see no reason why we should
slam the door on people just because
they have been taken behind the
Iron Curtain,” Shultz said.
Defending the administration’s
policy of covert aid for rightist “con
tra” guerrillas, the secretary said he
rejects the idea that once a Soviet-
supported government is established
in Latin America, it can never he
changed.
“We do have a moral duty to sup
port people who are trying to bring
about freedom in their country,”
Shultz said.
Shultz testified before the House
Foreign Affairs Committee on the
administration’s $14.8 billion mili
tary and economic foreign aid pack
age for fiscal year 1986.
There is deep opposition to a re
sumption of aid to the contras
among members of the Democratic-
controlled committee, and Shultz
fended off questions from a number
of members critical of administra
tion policies in Central America.
Urging Shultz to sponsor multila
teral negotiations among Latin
American countries with Nicaragua,
Rep. Gerry E. Studds, D-Mass., said,
“Surely the struggle for freedom
should lie something more than a
struggle between our terrorists and
their terrorists.”
government that is a bad kv;
eminent." he said.
The administration supponr
need for negotiations to d!
fighting, he said, but added it i
not be done without guarantee:
N icaragua would remain free::
viet control and initiate thez
cratic reforms.
T<
s1
Al
Shultz said the Sandinista leaders
have repeatedly failed to meet
pledges for making democratic re
forms and have never taken U.S. ef
forts to arrange peace negotiations
seriously.
"What we have in Managua is a
In El Salvador, where the Is,,
States is supporting thegovtiaL,., '
ol I,>sc Napoleon Duarte,Shufc
°i Co
a yeai ago there were predict! , (
an endless war In-tweengue: , C'
the left and death squads(f~) rt 1
1 ^ Se'
\* sa ‘ d - "rr^Hous
mat k and undeniable t0 " <: are ((
lightmi; and a moredemocr (
r "'\"T' , i o, siana
Shull/ noted that 28 pe brin
the U.S. aid program s and
Egypt and Israel, but said (ton ^-j s
aid lot Israel would bewithW^H- u
til the Jewish statedemonstri ^ljj
gi ess in solving its economic
lems. % S ' Hr
Chinese airliner drops 32,000 fee
enroute to LA, cause unknown
Associated Press
SAN FRANCISCO — A China
Airlines jumbo jet plunged 32,000
feet in less than two minutes T ues
day, injuring as many as 50 passen
gers and forcing the pilot to fly 500
miles with a torn tail section and a
bent wing before making an emer
gency landing here.
The Boeing 747, carrying 252
passengers and a crew of 20 from
Taipei, Taiwan to Los Angeles, was
northwest of San Francisco when it
dropped from a cruising altitude of
41,000 leet to 9,000 feet, said Ron
Wilson, a spokesman at San Fran
cisco International Airport.
There were conflicting reports
Tuesday night on what caused the
plane to drop more than six miles.
wind shear — a rapid chffi
wind speed and direction.
CBS News quoted an unidtK
Federal Aviation Adminisu
spokesman as saying thatturhi
played no role in the accident
that investigators are focuiffi
mechanical failure as the cause
Wilson said the National Trans
portation Safety Board was investi
gating engine failure as one cause, as
well as the possibility that the plane
hit a patch of turbulent air known as
One of the passengers,at!
Air Force pilot, told Wilson
prayed twice (for my life)-
Vietnam, and once today.”
C
South African police arrest
6 opponents to apartheid
Associated Press
JOHANNESBURG, South Africa — Security police
raided offices and homes in cities across the country
Tuesday, arresting six opponents of race segregation
on warrants for high treason.
Seven blacks were killed, policy said, in a second day
of battles between police and squatters in a shantytown
outside Cape Town, bringing the two-day death tdll to
13.
The raids and arrests, one of the severest apartheid
crackdowns in years, set the stage for the largest trea
son trial since the late 1950s. At that time the govern
ment unsuccessfully prosecuted 156 opponents of
South Africa’s whites-only rule in a single court case.
Lt. Vic Haynes of police headquarters in Pretoria
confirmed the treason arrests.
Haynes said the arrests resulted from the same inves
tigation that led to treason charges last year against
eight other foes of the white government’s race policies,
and the 14 probably would be tried together.
Rioting began in the Crossroads squatter camp
side Cape Town on Monday after rumors sprf^
the 60,000 residents soon would be movedforciU'
new “township” for blacks.
Cape Town police spokesmen said IQSpeop^j
injured in the two days, including41 admitted
als.
te:
Clc
707 Te
In Dali
tals. r:M
On Tuesday Lt. Attie Laubscher said poli« *
ickshot, tear gas and rubber bullets Tuesdi f
several thousand
]
buckshot,
crowds of several thousand blacks who weK
stones, slings and gasoline bombs. He said
boy and a man were killed, but declared Cr® r |
“tense but under control.” ,
Crossroads residents do not want to ini' I
Khayelitsha township, in which the govern^':
building houses, partly because it is six miles
from Cape Town, the white city where theyseei i
Schroeder’s condition improves!
allowing wheelchair ride outside
Associated Press
LOUISVILLE, Ky. — William
Schroeder became the first artificial
heart recipient ever to leave the con
fines of a hospital Tuesday, taking a
brief ride in a wheelchair into the
sunny parking lot at Humana Heart
Institute.
Schroeder, who received his im
plant 86 days ago, left the hospital
about 4 p.m., in a wheelchair with
his heart powered by the small, por
table Heimes drive system, said Rob
ert Irvine, a Humana spokesman.
Meanwhile, doctors said the third
artificial heart recipient, Murray
Haydon, sat up Tuesday, began
drinking fluids and exercising, and
might be able to get out of bed
Wednesday.
Haydon had a slightly queasy
stomach, probably a consequence of
the stress of open heart sur^i
Dr. Allan M. Lansing, ch# 1 :
Humana Heart Institute I s |
tional. i
The outlook for Schroed^f
been reported as gloomy o' 1 *
day, but doctors said it Dtijfl
considerably overnight andi | '|
were hoping within a weef ,
him for his first trip
pital.