Tuesday, October, 15, 1985/The Battalion/Page 7 Waldo by Kevin Thomas' I WANT TO j''//'//! PURCHASE YOUR LEAST EXPENSIVE <- SHOT-GUN// ''YOU GOT , IT MACH-/ OKj sully! TAKE THIS/ Former PLO ambassador to speak By ED CASSAVOY Stul l Writer Dr. Halem Hussaini, lonner Pal estine Liberation Or^an i/at ion am bassador to the L’nitecl Nations, will sj)eak Luesclay on the role of Pales tinians in a new Aral) world. The program, sponsored by Me morial Student (.'enter Political Fo rum, will l)egin at H p.m. in Rudder Theater. John Dixon, program coordina tor, said he decided on bringing Hussaini to A&M Irecause “I thought the PLO has been eclipsed with the riseol the newer Shiite radicals. ‘The question I wanted raised Was what is going to happen to the PLO as the representative ol the Palestin ian people?” Hussaini was born in Jerusalem, Palestine, in 1941. He lived as a rel’u- gee in Lebanon and Egypt alter his lamilv was forced to lease Palestine in 1948. Hussaini, who received his B.A. from the American University in Cairo and his Ph.l). in political sci ence Irom the University of Massa chusetts, has taught at four Ameri can universities since I9f>9: Smith College, the University of Maryland, the University of Massachusetts, and presently at Shaw University. Hussaini has been an active rep resentative of the Palestinian people through such involvement as the League of Arab States Office in Washington, D.C. HuSsaini served 10 years in the office, becoming the director in 1974. He also served as the director of the Palestine Information Office f rom 1978-82 and he was the deputy observer of the PLO to the U.N. in 1981-82. , Hussaini is presently an associate professor of international studies at Shaw University. Dixon said that Political Forum was worried that the topic of the PLO might be too sensitive to bring on campus. “I talked to Bob Wiatt (director of security and traffic at A&M) just to make sure," Dixon said. "Hussaini is a member of the moderate faction (of the PLO), but some Israeli stu dents and the Jewish population might l>e really incensed. "We don’t know how sensitive a subject it will be until we have it.” Wiatt said there will be uniformed University police present at Rudder Theater during the speech. “I think it might be a sensitive sub ject, and I hope there are no prob lems,” Wiatt said. “We just want to, make sure to plan for every contin gency." Hussaini, a member of the Pales tine National Council, the Palestine Parliament in exile, has written a number of articles and booklets on the Arab-Jsraeli conflict and the Middle East. Changes in Medicare policy are raising costs for elderly AssocwXssi Press WASHINGTON — Changes in Medicare that were intended to con trol medical inflation — successfully, the Reagan administration says — are having the unintended effect of sharply boosting the amount old people will pay out of their |>ockeis tor hospital care next year. The SI.I billion increase taking effect Jan. I will affect every Medi care recipient admitted to a hospital after that date. It will cost each of them an extra $92 per hospital stay, on top of the $400 they pav now. The increase also covers higher fees for people hospitalized for more than ()0 days and for people in skilled-nursing homes. All told, an estimated 8 million people will be hit with higher fees. The change in the Medicare hos pitalization deductible payment was ordered by the Department of Health and Human Services under a law intended to adjust the payment level to reflect rising hospital costs. The administration says it had no choice under that law but to order the increase. Research into body defect may aid heart disease fight Associated Press CAMBRIDGE, Mass. — Nobel prize-winning research into a rare defect in the body’s internal control of cholesterol is opening up new strategies f or understand ing and defeating heart disease, the nation’s biggest killer. Drs. Michael S. Brown and Jo seph L. Goldstein of the Univer sity of Texas Health Science Cen ter at Dallas, winners of the 1985 Nobel prize in medicine, unrav eled a flaw in the bodies of people who are struck by heart attacks at unusually early ages. One outgrowth of this research is attempts to rid the blood of dangerous amounts of choles terol by tinkering with the built-in machinery that ordinarly scours it from the blood. Cholesterol is a waxy alcohol that dissolves in fat but not water. To l)e carried in the blood, it must be attached to a water-solu ble protein, known as low-density lipoprotein, or LDL, that is made in the liver. The body’s cells need choles terol to make cell walls and pro duce hormones. But when exces sive amounts circulate in the bloodstream, it clogs th6 arteries and causes atherosclerosis, the major underlying cause of heart disease. ■ T T-T- "The secretary has no discretion in computing the inpatient hospital deductible and co-insurance amounts,’’ the administration said in its notice of the increase. But it also concedes that more than half of the increase has nothing to do with rising hospital costs, but instead reflects shorter hospital stays fostered by government payment _ |M)licies. The shorter hospital stays have had the effect of boosting the aver age daily cost far beyond overall cost increases. And the formula the gov ernment is required to follow is based on average daily costs, not overall costs. Jack Christy, a lobbyist for the American Association of Retired Persons, says the change is going to mean tighter budgets for elderly pensioners who can scrape together the extra money — and less medical care for those who can’t. “We’re seeing, or we will see, tre mendous access problems,” Christy said. “Many people can barely af ford $400; it's going to be very difficult for them to afford $492. Certainly it's time to re-evaluate the formula.” Lawmakers involved in health care already are beginning to brace for protests. The chairman of the Senate Spe cial Committee on Aging, Sen. John Heinz, R-Pa., has introduced legis lation to change the formula. Heinz says his bill would limit the increase to $4 or less. MSC Cafeteria Now Better Than Ever. You Will Be Pleased With These Carefully Prepared and Taste Tempting Foods. Each Daily Special Only $2.79 Plus Tax. “Open Daily” Dining: 11 A.M. to 1:30 P.M.-4:00 P.M. to 7:00 P.M. MONDAY EVENING TUESDAY EVENING SPECIAL SPECIAL Salisbury Steak with Mushroom Gravy Whipped Potatoes Mexican Fiesta Dinner Two Cheese ahd Onion Enchiladas w/Chili Mexican Rice Patio Style Pinto Beans Tostadas Coffee or Tea Your Choice of One Vegetable Roll or Corn Bread & Butter Coffee or Tea WEDNESDAY EVENING SPECIAL Chicken Fried Steak w/ Cream Gravy Whipped Potatoes and Choice of one other Vegetable Roll or Com Bread and Butter Coffee or Tea THURSDAY EVENING SPECIAL Italian Candle Light Spaghetti Dinner SERVED WITH SPICED MEAT BALLS AND SAUCE Parmesan Cheese-Tossed Green Salad Choice of Salad Dressing-Hot Garlic Bread Tea or Coffee YOU GET MORE FOR YOUR MONEY WHEN YOU DINE ON CAMPUS FRIDAY EVENING SPECIAL Fried Catfish Filet w/ Tarta Sauce Cole Slaw Hush Puppies Choice of One Vegetable Tea or Coffee SATURDAY NOON and EVENING SPECIAL Yankee Pot Roast Texas Style (Tossed Salad) Mashed Potatoes w/Gravy Roll or Corn Bread & Butter Tea or Coffee ‘Quality First SUNDAY SPECIAL NOON and EVENING Roast Turkey Dinner Served with Cranberry Sauce Combread Dressing Roll or Corn Bread & Butter Coffee or Tea Giblet Gravy And Your Choice of any One Vegetable It’s not too Late If your interested in starting the newest tradition at A&M, the Delta Chi fraternity wants to talk to you. —Contact our national representatives David Surber & Robb Chapin 696-4242 Room #137, Ramada Inn ★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★ Aggie Democrats * * * i I | Important Meeting The Democratic Party of Texas A&M { Tuesday, October 15, 1985 8:30 pm 402 Rudder * * * * * * * * * * New Members Welcome Padre Cafe has a margarita special that blows the competition away. .25 EVERYDAY Aggies’ favorite drink is the margarita and their favorite place is the Padre Cafe. Now we’ve brought the two together with the best special in town. Get ice cold margaritas, frozen or on the rocks for $1.25. All day. Every day. Our margaritas are made with Tequilla Sauza products, not that cheap “border town” tequilla the competition uses. And while you’re at the Padre Cafe, try some quesadillas or an order of our world class fajitas. We were making them first and we still make them best. Dominik Drive College Station-BY-THE-SEA 764-8064 ****************************