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Hotliul Hance planning to enter 1986 gubernatorial race — Page 3 Special force trying clear Beirufs airport area of militias — Page 6 Professional baseball players choose tentative strike date — Page 7 The Battalion u-CARE Pol. 79 Mo. 171 GSPS 045360 8 paqes College Station, Texas Tuesday July 16, 1985 Oft* ^President had cancer; ^■doctors believe spread of malignancy stopped riONAL R LTD. irmation E. 301-C ialexpwy, Associated Press ■ BETHESDA, Md. — Doctors told ■esident Reagan on Monday he had colon cancer but that they be- lilve surgeons removed all the ma lignant tissue before it spread to oilier areas of his body. ■ Dr. Steven Rosenberg of the Na- Konal Cancer Institute, said, “The ■ajority of patients in exactly the president’s situation will certainly survive five years and beyond; it’s clrtainly greater than 50 percent.” ■ Rosenberg said he had spoken to tie president about his condition for fie minutes, shortly after informing the first lady. Reagan’s spokesman, liarry Speakes, said Nancy Reagan “Iccepted the news in a very calm fishion.” ■ Navy Capt. Dale Oiler, Reagan’s c|ief surgeon, quoted the president ai saying, “Well, I’m glad that that’s all out,” after being informed that a Microscopic examination of the tis sue had determined the tumor was cancerous. ■ Oiler also said that the president continued in his superlative recovery flom the operation Saturday at Be- jspita two-inch intestinal tumor and a two- foot section of the colon surround- ingit. Rosenberg told reporters at news briefing at the hospital, “The presi dent has cancer.” But asked if Rea gan now has cancer, the doctor said there was “a greater than 50 percent chance that the president now has no cancer, no cancer cells in his body and is completely cured.” “We have no evidence that this cancer has spread, and I think the chances are good that no spread will take place,” he said. The doctor said there is a “greater than 50 percent chance” that the sec ond most deadly form of cancer will not recur during the 74-year-old president’s normal lifespan. Rosenberg said he would advise the president that after he recovers from the surgery, “There should be no change in his activity pattern whatsoever” and there is no reason for him to consider retirement. The findings did show, however, that the cancer in the tumor discov ered on Friday had invaded the muscle wall of the bowel, which means doctors caught it after it had begun to spread. That increases the likelihood the disease will show up again in the liver or elsewhere. “The majority of the patients in exactly the president’s situation will certainly survive five years and be yond,” the cancer specialist told re porters at the military hospital, where Reagan was admitted Friday. “However, there is a chance that the tumor may recur at some time in the future,” the doctor said. “It’s less than 50 percent.” Reagan should have regular colon examinations — like the one which uncovered the tumor — as well as regular examinations of his other body organs, Rosenberg said. Because radiation and chemothe rapy, the most commonly used treat ments after cancer surgery, have not been found effective in treating colon cancer, Reagan probably will not be given further therapy but will be closely monitored for any sign of recurrence, Rosenberg said. HBrush, forest fires wreak havoc in South Dakota PUTS IT0 ERIALS Main Associated Press I The governor of South Dakota ■fclared a state of emergency in the smoking Black Hills on Monday as stubborn brush and forest blazes persisted in six Western states and Canada, where a falling rock killed a firefighter. I In many areas, however, firelight ers headed home as more blazes sub- ?iiided after destroying more than a million acres in the United States and hundreds of thousands more in Canada. I Dave Lentz, a Bureau of Land Management dispatcher in Portland, Ore., said “Basically, we're returning to business as usual.” I Flames, some ignited by overnight lightning in the parched West, con tinued to rage in California, Ari zona, Montana, New Mexico, Idaho and South Dakota. B Crews struggling to stop fires that have charred 18,500 acres in the southern Black Hills of South Da kota fought a new blaze Monday af ter containing a 3,000-acre outbreak the day before. The fires prompted Gov. Bill Jan- klow to declare a state of emergency in the area, allowing him to place the adjutant general of the state Na tional Guard, Ron Williamson, in command of all firefighting efforts. “The emergency is significant enough that it can’t be dealt with by different agencies all trying to coor dinate together,” Janklow said. “One person has to be able to make deci sions and call on the resources in stantaneously of really the whole government.” According to Janklow, one of the main fires south of Hot Springs was in “very rugged country ... lots of crevices, lots of valleys, lots of steep slopes. It’s very hard to fight.” A 22-year-old firefighter died Sunday after being struck by a rock while battling one of seven major fires covering 84,500 acres in British Columbia. Still, authorities reported pro gress against the Canadian out breaks. Six of the seven fires were ei ther contained or under control Monday. In California, the largest fire still out of control — a 28,780-acre blaze south of California’s scenic Big Sur — was 50 percent contained Mon day, but U.S. Forest Service spokes man Frank Fetsher said it probably wouldn’t be contained before Tues day. Elsewhere in California, 11 fires were contained, controlled or extin guished over the weekend. Among those contained was the Los Gatos blaze, which scorched 13,900 acres in the Santa Cruz mountains, sent 4,500 people fleeing and consumed 20 houses. Twenty small fires broke out on state land in Oregon over the week end, said Jim Fisher, spokesman for the state Department of Forestry, who added that all were controlled Monday. Life’s Little Ups and Downs Photo by Anthony S. Casper High-flying Mike Hidalgo of San Antonio puts his ski-board to the test on Meadow Lake on the Gua- delupe River near: Seguin over the weekend. Hi dalgo performed the 360 degree flip in the air while being strapped to the board. Hidalgo devel oped the stunt while riding behind a jet ski boat. ue I store, rventory I used: :rbacks i • tap«s rare book* books records lie im the :rs tory is 5 price [liblylo* /eek I Geldof: live Aid’ was world’s day Reversal of 1973 decision sought Reagan seeks new abortion ruling Associated Press Bob NG MS 1 LONDON — Irish singer Geldof declared he was over whelmed by the multimillion dollar response to the Live Aid concert for African famine relief, and predicted Monday that the response would stir world governments. I “Like it’s overwhelming,” said Geldof, leader of the Boomtown Rats, and now a Nobel Prize nomi nee feted by government leaders for organizing the two-continent extrav- itganza. “But it wasn’t just the bands. It was the world’s day. “Pop music more than anything else expressed the emotion of the day and I think the message is fi nally, finally getting through (to gov ernments),” Geldof, 32, in a telephone inter view with The Associate Press, said a final total of the amount raised from the 16-hour, Saturday-Sunday con cert by the world’s top rock stars |jvould not be known until Thursday. Kevin Jenden, project director for ■and Aid Trust that will decide how |he funds are spent, estimated in a british Broadcasting Corp. interview that the total in pledges and ticket lales would reach about $55.6 mil- nce 1878 lion. That is nearly fouf times what Geldof had hoped to raise. Organizers had earlier estimated the total would be about $70 million. Geldof said that “the amount of money is just staggering.” He took the accolades and the fame calmly. “World fame? It’s a kind of abstract notion, Geldof said.” “Nothing like it is going to make any difference to me. I’m sitting here with a bunch of papers and a cup of tea, that’s real.” Geldof was nominated by Norwe gian legislator Sissel Roenbeck for the Nobel Peace Prize, and appeared delighted at the possibility of joining the eminent lineup of past winners. “Of course I’d accept it — I’d even pay my own fare,” said Geldof, add ing he would give the prize money to Live Aid. Live Aid’s seven trustees will con fer Thursday about specific projects the trust will fund in Ethiopia, Su dan and other drought-ravaged Af rican nations, Harvey Goldsmith, co- producer, told reporters. See Live Aid, page 8 Associated Press WASHINGTON —The Reagan administration on Monday urged the Supreme Court to overturn its 1973 decision legalizing abortions, arguing that women should not have a constitutional right to end their pregnancies. Justice Department lawyers said the 1973 ruling in a case known as Roe vs. Wade “has proved inher ently unworkable,” and wrongly in fringes on states’ rights to limit abor tions. At Bethesda Naval Hospital, where President Reagan is recov ering from intestinal surgery, White House spokesman Larry Speakes said the president had approved of the briefs filing. Both “pro-life” and “pro-choice” forces predicted that the bold move will fail. The court two years ago strongly reaf firmed — by a 6-3 vote — the 1973 ruling, and its mem bership has not changed since that 1983 ruling. The high court’s 1973 ruling es tablished that women have a consti tutional right to end their pregnan cies, and greatlv limited how states may interfere with that right. If the ruling were overturned, such a constitutional right would no longer exist. States would be free to TM Supreme Court's 1973 ridmg. that women have a constitutional right ■■ to• nancies, and greatly limited how States may interfere with that right, if the ruling were overturned, ^ch■ constitutional right would no longer exist. impose whatever limits they deemed appropriate — including banning all abortions except those necessary to except save a woman’s life. Reagan has long complained that the 1973 Supreme Court ruling in fringes on states’ rights to limit abor tions. Arguments in the cases are not ex pected before December. Douglas Johnson, legislative di rector of the National Right to Life Committee, said, “We welcome the Reagan administration brief. We see this as one more small step in a step- by-step process in getting rid of a di sastrous Supreme Court decisiop.” But he said, “I have no reason to be lieve that the current Supreme Court would overturn the deicsion.” Judy Goldsmith, president of the National Organization for Women, said: “It is unconscionable and per fectly predictable. This is an all-out assault on women’s rights to make their own reproductive decisions, and instead have the government make those decisions for them. It is a continuation of the Reagan adminis tration’s war on women since he took office.” The government’s “friend-of-the- court” brief in two abortion cases to be studied in the court term begin ning in October argued that the jus tices should “return the law to the condition in which it was” before Jan. 22, 1973, when the decision in Roe vs. Wade was announced. That would leave states free to im pose whatever limits they deemed appropriate — including banning all abortions except those necessary to save a woman’s life. In the 1973 ruling, the court said a woman’s decision to have an abor tion during the first three months of her pregnancy must be left to her and her doctor. The court said states may inter fere in the woman’s abortion deci sion during her pregnancy’s second trimester only to protect the worn* an’s health, and may take steps trt protect fetal life only in the third tri mester when the fetus has grown “vi able,” able to live outside the womb. In the brief filed Monday, govern ment lawyers said, “The key factors in the equation — viability, trimes ters, the right to terminate one’s pre gnancy — have no moorings in the text or our Constitution or in famil iar constitutional doctrine.” The main thrust of the 30-page brief was an attack on lower court rulings that invalidated certain state abortion regulations in Illinois and Pennsylvania. Invalidated provisions of the Illi nois law required doctors to use abortion methods least likely td harm the fetus if there was a possi bility that it was viable and required doctors to tell patients, that certain kinds of birth control cause “fetal death.”