The Battalion. (College Station, Tex.) 1893-current, October 29, 1985, Image 12

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    Page 12/The Battalion/Tuesday, October 29, 1985
SHOE
by Jeff MacNelly
ICOK AT TUB ROLE
MOPELS THE KIP£
OF TOW HAVE...
FREAKV RceKSMGER.%
OVERPAID DAIXPLAVER6,
SLEAZY F^LITIOIANS!!...
$0 UNLIKE OUR HEROES
WHEN WE WERE KIDS.
RIGHT fAJl'HERO
NEVER TOOK PRUE6
OR GOT INTO TROUBLE
N0.6IR...
. MR. PbTATO HEAP
NEVER LET MB DOWN.
Jarvik-7 recipient
gets human heart
from Ohio donor
Bid for peace to be discussed
Hussein, Arafat review pact
Associated Press
AMMAN, Jordan — King Hus
sein and PLO chairman Yasser Ar
afat met Monday to reassess their
relationship and the future of their
faltering joint bid to make peace
with Israel.
Arcifat and eight other top offi
cials of the Palestine Liberation Or
ganization went to the royal palace
for meetings with Hussein, who told
reporters last week that he was re
considering his relations with the
PLO after a new cycle of violence
and diplomatic setbacks.
The king also had said it was up to
the Palestinian people to decide
whether the PLO should continue to
represent them.
But Arafat’s chief military deputy,
Khalil Wazir, told reporters he be
lieved everything will be solved after
the meeting with Hussein. Wazir,
who is also known as Abu Jihad, pre
dicted the accord Hussein and Ar
afat signed Feb. 11 to pursue a joint
negotiating strategy would not be af
fected.
Hussein told a news conference
Thursday he was reassessing the en
tire situation of his relations with the
PLO in the light of recent events.
Those include the Sept. 25 slaying
by PLO guerrillas of three Israelis
aooard a yacht in Cyprus, Israel’s re
taliatory bombing of PLO headquar
ters in Tunis on Oct. 1 and the kill
ing of an American passenger
aboard an Italian cruise ship hi-
Hussein told a news con
ference Thursday he was
reassessing the entire situ
ation of his relations with
the PLO in the light of re
cent events.
jacked by Palestinian gunmen.
Hussein also was upset by the
cancellation of a meeting between
British Foreign Secretary Geoffrey
Howe and senior PLO officials, an
encounter that had been intended to
ease the way for eventual contacts
between the PLO and the United
States.
The Feb. 1 1 agreement between
Hussein and Arafat called for peace
with Israel in return for its witndra-
wal from all land occupied in the
1967 war and the creation of a Pales
tinian state. This plan called for de
tails to be worked out at a confer
ence sponsored by the United
Nations.
Efforts to involve the United
States, a critical player in the plan,
have been stymied in part by PLO
refusal to recognize two United Na
tions resolutions that imply recogni
tion of Israel but fail to mention Pal
estinian rights to a state.
Prime Minister Shimon Peres of
Israel hinted last week he would
make concessions on the demand for
an international conference if Jor
dan would drop its insistence on in
cluding the PLO in any peace set-
icl It
tlement between Israel and Jordan.
Fund-raising competition disliked
(continued from page 1)
gettable.
“I thought I was prepared
when I went there,” she said.
“But I was totally devastated by
what I saw. I can’t tell you what
it’s like to be there, to t>e in the
midst of it all, to smell it, to feel it,
to see it, to taste it, to hear the
cries of the children with their
flesh hanging from their bones . .
. and that look in their eyes.
“I don’t know if I live to be
110-years-old, like Miss Jane Pit
tman did, that I will ever have the
kind of experience I had during
my visit to Africa,” the actress
added, referring to one of her
most famous roles.
She reeled off a list of ortrani-
>rgant-
zations — some new, some old —
that are raising money for Africa.
“I do get a little concerned
about the possibility of the feeling
of competition between the orga
nizations,” she said. “There is no
room for that. The goal is the
same. The goal is to save lives, es
pecially lives of innocent chil
dren.
"Though we may take differ
ent roles toward that goal, ultima
tely that’s what’s important, not
who gave what,” Tyson said. “It
doesn’t matter. What’s important
is that it was given and it will, in
some way down the line, save a
life.”
All Day Drink Specials
(11 a.m. to Midnight)
Margarita Monday
$1 Margaritas (frozen or on the rocks)
Tequila Tuesday
$1 Margaritas (frozen or on the rocks)
Corona Wednesday
$1 Corona Beer
Tecate Thursday
$1 Tecate Beer
Aggie Sunday
Get half price drinks when you
show your student I.D.
■p m
Also Featuring:
Daily Lunch Specials
Authentic Mexican Food
(Mon.-Fri.)
Happy Hour
Mon. - Sun. 4-6 p.m.
4501 Texas Ave. South in Bryan
846-3696
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I
Associated Press
PITTSBURGH — A 47-year-old
factory worker kept alive four days
with a Jarvik-7 artificial heart beat-
in nis
ing in nis chest was given the heart
of an Ohio man in a transplant oper
ation Monday, hospital officials said.
Thomas J. Gaidosh of Sutersville
was in critical condition after the
3 l /z-hour procedure, which surgeons
described as “routine,” said Tom
Chakurda, spokesman for Presbyte-
rian-University Hospital of Pitts
burgh.
“They had been looking for a
heart for 2 , /2 weeks,” hospital
spokeswoman Ann Metzger said.
In Hershey, Pa., doctors contin
ued searching for a human heart for
Anthony Mandia, the first recipient
of the Penn State artificial heart.
And in San Francisco, Richard E.
Dailara resumed eating solid food
Monday and joked with his family as
twin mechanical pumps circulated
blood through his body.
Because of Gaidosh’s cardiomyo
pathy, or degeneration of the heart
muscle, doctors had expected him to
live less than a day when the Jarvik-7
was implanted to keep him alive un
til a human organ could be found.
Gaidosh’s transplanted heart
came from James Randall Riege, 26,
But he told the Israeli Parliament
on Monday that no international fo
rum can replace direct negotiations.
of Alexandria, Ohio, whose kidneys
and corneas also were donated for
transplantation, said Doug Paplac-
zyk, spokesman for Miami Valley
Hospital in Dayton, Ohio.
"We wantea them to go to some-*
one who needed them,” Donna Dea
ton, Riege’s sister, told The Asso
ciated Press in a telephone interview
from her parents’ West Alexandria
home. “Tne whole family had al
ready decided a long time ago to do
nate our good parts. ’
Riege’s wife Glaudia, 27, “was
happy when she heard the news . . .
knowing her husband’s heart was
helping someone now,” Paplaczyk
said.
Riege, a computer programmer,
died Sunday niglit, a day after t>eing
injured in a traffic accident, Paplac
zyk said.
Presbyterian-University surgeons
flew to Dayton by chartered jet to re
move the heart, then returned to
Pittsburgh for the transplant opera
tion that ended around 5:45 a.m.
Mrs. Riege and the couple’s 3-
year-old daughter were released
from the hospital Monday after be
ing treated for injuries from the ac
cident. Another child, 5 months old,
was in critical condition at Ghildren’s
Medical Genter in Dayton.
Families are reassured
(continued from page 1)
gestions,” Say said. "(But) there ap-
parently are not any
Dreakthrougns.”
In recent weeks, one of the nine
Americans kidnapped in Lebanon
since early 1984 nas been reported
killed. This followed the release of
another, who carried a message that
the remaining hostages wouldf die if
the kidnappers’ demands were not
met.
Jacobsen saitl McFarlane real-
firmed a commitment made several
months ago “to speak directly with a
representative ol the group" that
‘>eliev<
believed responsible for the hostage
taking.
“If the captors arc willing to come
out and open up some direct lines of
commmunication,” progress could
be made in gaining the h<
sen said.
lease, J acobsen
The
Battalion
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