The Battalion. (College Station, Tex.) 1893-current, December 06, 1985, Image 10

Below is the OCR text representation for this newspapers page. It is also available as plain text as well as XML.

    Why Settle For Less?
Ol’ Lou Pays More For
Used Books.
Page lOH'he Battalion/Friday, December 6.1985
loupot’s
BOOKSTORE
FREE PARKING IN REAR FOR CUSTOMERS
World and Nation
Cal
STUDY I
*
STUDY II
STUDY III
Recent injury to
wrist, knee or ankle?
Severe enough pain
to remain on study
up to 10 days and 5
visits?
Recent injury with
pain to any muscle or
joint?
One-dose (4 hours)
in-house study.
Recent injury with in
flammation (swelling,
pain, heat, tender
ness)?
Study of 5 day dura
tion with only 2 visits
required.
Volunteers interested in participating in investigative drug studies
will be paid for their time and cooperation.
G&S Studies, inc. 846-5933
Social Security
New program will re-classify the physically disabled
pot
As
Associated Press
★★★★★★★★★
*
*
+
*
*
*
*
*
*
*
*
*
*
*
*
*
+
*
*
*
»
*
4-
CABARET NIGHT
SATURDAY, Dec. 7, 9:00 p.m.
featuring
The Internationally Famous
Entertainer & Singing Star
Miss Totlyn Jackson
sponsored by
Bnai Brith Hillel Foundation
800 Jersey 696-7313
^ Admission Free • All Welcome • Refreshments will be served
★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★
+
*
*
*
*
4-
4-
4-
4-
4-
4-
4-
4-
4-
4-
4-
4-
4-
4-
4-
4-
4-
4-
4-
WASHINGTON — Still smarting
from the bruising it took in its first
attempt, the government said
Thursday it will resume culling So
cial Security disability rolls of people
who have become pnysically able to
hold jobs.
But it said it will use a scalpel, not
a meat cleaver, in its new approach
to evaluating the medical condition
* of some 2.6 million people now clas
sified as physically disabled and un
able to work. The program begins
next month.
New federal regulations will require proof of medical
improvement before disability benefit checks can be cut
off More thorough reviews and face-to-face interviews
should ease the trauma for disabled people.
New federal regulations will re-
quire proof of medical improvement
before disability benefit checks can
he cut of f. And Social Security says
more thorough reviews coupled with
a personal approach, including face-
to-face interviews, should ease the
trauma for disabled people worried
about their benefits.
Health and Human Services Sec
retary Margaret M. Heckler said the
new procedures were developed af
ter months of review and consulta
tion with affected groups who were
sharply critical of the first attempt at
reviewing the disability rolls.
Congress first ordered the review
in 1980 after the General Account-
benefits to about 291,000 of those
people. Lawsuits involving some
ing Office estimated that more than
500,000 people receiving disability
checks were physically capable of
holding jobs.
HHSbegan the job in in 1981, but
it soon was engulfed by protests that
truly disabled people were being
clumped from the rolls unfairly.
Of the first 1.2 million people re
viewed, 491,000 were ordered cut
off from benefits. Appeals restored
69,000 cases are pending
Lobbying groups fo
ties, arid their congre
porters, said that peoplt
dropped from the n
r beneucia-
ssional sup-
* were being
after only a
cursory review of medical records,
often without an opportunity to ar
gue their case and in some cases
without being allowed to present ad
ditional medical documents.
In April 1984, after trying unsuc
cessfully to quell the uproar through
internal reforms. Heckler sus
pended the review and sought new
standards from Congress.
Legislators responded with a new
law that requires, with a few
tions, (hat medical improvemtsj
documented before any pemj
taken ol I the disability rolls.
The exceptions include
whose medical conditions
improved, but w hose ability
is established, such as ihrouyt
pletion of vocational trail
through actually hoi
also include cases ol trandon
to follow prescribed ireatniw,
would restore bisorheraHi
work.
Social Security Ad
spokesman James M. Brown
I tr ials want to prevent pasi
from recurring.
“Some mistakes were mai
said. "People were takendUilfi I
who should not have beental©
We d< i i mi dcm that." ftitfe
the new process is '‘goingjiA 1
It s going to lx* compassions
In January, almut 55,f
will go out asking peopletD®
to their local Social Securitydi
lK-gin the review, he said,
FRESNO,
rious about t
to breed in tf
Do you ca
gnawing on <
Did vou (
value of acor
If so, you
research re
mental cattle
vada foothill
• •
**
)}_ up 8 5 Uz zii.tm.ai < 0~ > zocjzam
Canned ‘fdood fldzius.
Ship stowaway scheduled
for hearing on political asylum
tv
VS
For the needy of Bryan/College Station
December 3-13,1985
(l
Make donations in front of the Student Programs
Office, Rm.216, MSC or on the shuttle buses or
|) in respective dorms.
^ Donations will be distributed by the
^ v ^ Bryan/College Station Eagle’s Cheer
J Fundand the Society for St. Ste-
4 . 4 V v phens.
cNfz.oni.ozsA fij cHoifzLtafitij
••
a
•5
9
••
••
*•
• •
(i
$
Associated Press
• •
•• «
r • •
FINALLY
Tired of the inconvenience of going to a laundromat.
If you have at least two other roommates, then for
about the same amount of money that all of you are
already spending, all of you can enjoy the affordable
convenience of having a brand-new washer and
dryer.
(W/D connections required)
IMAGINE THE ADVANTAGES
•Can wash as often as you wish
•No more hassels with the weather
•No more scrounging for quarters
•No more leaving your home to wash
For more details please call Hinphil
Rentals at 693-6527 and ask for Phil.
Ask about our Student X-mas special
NEW ORLEANS — A Palestinian
stowaway who twice jumped ship,
the second time wearing handcuffs
as he dived into swirling river waters
Thursday morning, has told immi
gration authorities that he is seeking
political asylum.
Mohamad Marie, 20, a Palestinian
born in Syria who had sneaked
aboard the ship in the Dutch port of
Rotterdam, w'as brought to New Or
leans later in the day for an immi
gration hearing.
The double escape recalled the in
cident of Miroslav Medvid, a 29-
year-old Ukrainian sailor who
jumped off a Soviet freighter here in
October. Medvid twice tried to es
cape, but later said that he chose to
return home and the ship sailed with
bin) aboard despite strong protests
in Congress.
Marie, however, had claimed he
wanted to go to Canada after getting
off the ship Monday and did not
raise the asylum issue until Thurs
day, said Darrell Goff, a Border Pa
trol agent in Baton Rouge.
Agents said Marie dived off the
Liberian-registered ship Enard
Hope about 3:15 a.m. Thursday and
was rescued from the river near Ba
ton Rouge.
The freighter, loaded with coal,
left port without Marie, en route to
the West Coast and Japan, the
freighter’s U.S. shipping agent said.
Trie Border Patrol said it was noti
fied Sunday in Baton Rouge that the
ship had a stowaway. That day an
immigration inspector boarded the
ship, interviewed Marie and ordered
that he be kept aboard, said Goff,
who described it as a routine case.
ness, said Eric Guidry, owner ol I
G Marine Supply Co. Inc.
“He was Handcuffed and th
picked him up about a mile beli
the ship,” Guiciry said.
On Monday, Marie slipped
aboard a water taxi and made it to
shore, Golf said.
William Worley, deputy chief of
the Border Patrol in New Orleans,
said Marie was apprehended and
turned over to the ship’s agents, who
arranged to fly him to Syria.
Marie got as far as Atlanta, Wor
ley said, but was turned back because
he made a commotion and did not
have a visa to enter Germany, a slop-
over. He vygs th^n^turned,U> Lgui- ,
siana and pqt ba<;k oji the s)yip by the
agent, Worley said.
“The only request he made vyas to
go to Canada,” Goff said. However,
he didn’t have a visa to enter Can
ada, where his father lives.
Goff said Marie told authorities
his father has enemies in Syria and
that he feared harm if he returned.
He was returned to the ship
Wednesday.
Thursday morning, lie jumped
ship and was found bobbing in a
strong current in the morning dark-
“He was still trying to hold his
head up above the water when mv
crewboat went over and picked him
up. ... He was probably an expert
swimmer,” Guidry said.
In Cleveland, meanwhile, a Polish
sailor who has asked for asylum was
assured of support by Sen. Howard
Metzenbaum, D-Ohio.
Most rece
technical, co
effect of niti
ers on clove
point counts
lands.
But a dire
formed at t
mental Stati
Urb
Farms
3 killed
in refine
explos
IRVING
: trasts.
A lone ti
I archaic gas
! with farm t
with a bed f
an old-fasl
| rounded b)
I with cows
[nearby.
Directly
house, cars
Associated Press
LAKE CHARLES. La -!
“There is a strong feeling, 1 think,
throughout the country that if a
young man wants to remain in the
United Stales under these circum
stances and wants political asylum,
that we ought to make even effort
to see',that" ifis possible/ Met/en-
■ bauin said Wednesday . ' •
Leszek Kapsa, 27, a, cook on the
freighter Ziemia Lubefska, decided
to defect after talking to a visitor on
the ship, a Polish citizen who lives in
Cleveland and offered to let Kapsa
stay with him, said the Rev. Marian
M. Kencik of Transfiguration
Church.
The visitor, who did not want to
be identified because he is also seek
ing asylum, contacted Kencik and
the priest called the senator.
Chicken makes menu at Buckley gala
Associated Press
NEW YORK — William F. Buck-
ley Jr. invited 700 of his friends, in
cluding President Reagan and
Charlton Heston, to share chicken
potpie Thursday and celebrate the
30th anniversary of the National Re
view, the conservative magazine he
founded.
The guest list included jounalist
Mike Wallace, CIA Director William
Casey, actor Tom Selleck and for
mer ambassador Clare Boothe Luce.
Heston was to serve as master of cer
emonies and Reagan was to give a
10-minute speech.
Musical entertainment at the
Plaza Hotel was to range from jazz
piano to Bach, Handel and Scarlatti
played on the harpsichord — al
though not by Buckley, who is ac
complished on the instrument.
Other speakers were to include
Rep. Jack Kemp, R-N.Y.', William
Rusher, publisher of the National
Review; conservative columnist
George Will; and Priscilla Buckley,
sister of the founder and the mag
azine’s managing editor who is re
tiring at year’s end, said spokeswo
man Dorothy McCartney.
Buckley, the final speaker,
founded the National Review in
1955 with $130,000 of his own
money and private contributions.
In the first issue, Buckley pro
claimed that the magazine "stands
athwart history yelling Stop."
Buckley, who has been described
as “the Renaissance man of the
Right,” is host of PBS-TV’s.“Firing
Line,” and has written numerous
books, including a series of spy nov
els. He served briefly in the CIA af
ter graduating from Yale University,
but said he found it boring.
McCartney described the dinner’s
main course as “chicken potnie a la
Pat and Mr. Alexander,” and said it
was a special recipe created by Buck
ley’s wife, Pat, and S. Alexander, the
Plaza’s director of catering.
Alexander’s assistant, Cecilia
explosion .md Hash fireiniGel
pressor at a Citjjo Oil rtfiiT
killed three workers \4 A
n \ ing to repair it Tlmrsda), K
A lourtn employee sufiail
minoi injuries in theUasuii
i el men on lit. I OB justsccf
Sulphur.
i he cause of the explosioinl;
In (Iron eater unit at thcpImiiiK
still under investigation,ii|
Kent Young, a Citgo spotafli
in Oklahoma City; fj
1 he four employee!-tel
ma< hinists and a uuiioptrtt-K
were repairing a cpMjl
when tlu explosionjixpiil
11:30 a.m., he said.
Calcasiell Parish
spokesman John Scott Daw;
the four men “were wops*|
this unit when it exploded 1 1
Hash fire" ignited.
“It ignited,” Doyle said.
type of gas substance in iki®
where they were workintdte!
Line Road
of Technol
ing. Jets fn
i ternational
images of t
; Las Colina:
i distance.
It is one <
i stems from
| the last 35
of growth i
rural comn
j ding city of
The fan
mony to wl
The hoi
Won
compressor and it ignitei
Doyle said the injuredM li |
treated at the scene.
" 1 here’s no problem wd*®
other leakage, it’s .all d«tS
Doyle said.
Young said the fire did®
spread beyond the comptflS
and the hydrotreater unit,*®
was removing impurities fe§-
kcrosene at the time.Opetffl
in the remainder ol therefffT
were not affected, he said, j;
Yu Cat leton, directorolitW
ing at the plant, said ewiy
damage was minor and"®/
was extinguished quickly" |
slot
else
Lyons, described it
breasts “in a rich supreme*
with artichoke hearts, : M
mushrooms, leeks, baby
peas and green beans.
Guests paid $300 perciwi
$ 175 for the unattached.
Witnesses say police disrupted vigils
Associated Press
JOHANNESBURG, South Africa
— Police using whips and tear gas
broke up candlelight vigils for im
prisoned anti-apartheid activists and
dispersed thousands of mourners at
a black girl’s funeral, witnesses said
Thursday.
National police headquarters in
Pretoria reported stone-throwing
and gasoline bombings late Wednes
day and early Thursday in most of
the sprawling mixed-race townships
east of Cape Town.
A spokesman denied charges that
riot patrols broke up the candlelight
services Wednesday night without
provocation. He said the gatherings
were illegal and that police moved in
after their warnings were ignored.
Black activist Winnie Mandela,
wife of jailed guerrilla leader Nelson
Mandela, entered a clinic in Johan
nesburg for a stay of several days be
cause of exhaustion, a tanuly source
said.
Mandela, 50, had been through
several tense weeks after her hus
band, 67, had prostate surgery and
persistent rumors spread of his im
pending release after more than two
decades in prison.
A witness said police fired tear gas
Thursday mornirig to scatter about
5,000 mourners at the funeral of an
18-year-old girl shot dead by police
last week in Soweto, the huge black
township near Johannesburg.
Police said they warned the crowd
that the gathering violated state of
emergency rules limiting funeral at
tendance to 50 people.
Most mourners regrouped alter
the initial charge and the service
went on, but police returned and
fired more tear gas canisters to drive
tire mourners away from the dead
girl’s home, the witness said, speak
ing on condition of anonymity.
In other Soweto incidents, an offi
cer was seriously wounded bv a hand
grenade and a school was damaged
in an arson attack, police reported.
It was the second grenade attack in
two days on a police patrol in the
township.
National police headquarters said
there were no deaths in the violence
Thursday. Three people were re
ported killed Tuesaay and Wednes
day in Cape Province.
About 900 people have died in
I m r * n f
who attended went outside®;
hit by tear gas from anarmotf
lice vehicle across the street,
“I just think the SouthAfiitfl
lice once again have s’
selves to be the pigs that the
think that they are,” said’
who laces subversion charges
free on bail. “There is absolifl
excuse for what happened lien
more than 15 months of rioting
against apartheid, the race laws wit
wni
which the
government preserves
privilege for South Africa’s 5 million
Buy a sandwich and have
a Super Soda on us.
whites and denies rights to the 24
million blacks. Nearly all the victims
have been black.
The Rev. Allan Boesak, a leading
mixed-race cleric, said he led a cand
lelight vigil Wednesday night at his
church in Bellville South, outside
Cape Town. Some of the 700 people
SWENSEN’S
Free Super Soda
with purchase of any sandwich or hamburger plate J
Not good wfth any other offer or discount. Extra charge on take-out orders. |
Culpepper Plaza
jr.
Otfer expires 12-22-85j
Clark Tours
Escorted Motor Coach Tours Guide Service
Special group arrangements
Charter Rates
Cotton Bowl Charters
Call now for complete arrangements
call 778-0745
Lt. Attic Laubscher, tkl
Town police spokesman, sar
200 people gathered outsr
sak’s church and “policeasWJ
to disperse. The majority did‘ ;
then wanted the rest who 1
standing around, and then
gas to disperse them.”
The parish council sent a
to Louis le Grange, minister 1 !
and order, demanding a*V
that churches “may carry otj,
their worship without being/
ened by your police.”
OWfwaij
APARTMENTS
Now preleasing for spring
$275.°°
as low as
1 • 2 • 3 Bedrooms
Ask about o ir specials
C