Monday, March 24, 1986/The Battalion/Page 5 ^Congressman ^defends vote 'nfor Contra aid HI Associated Press BROWNSVILLE — Rep. Solo mon Ortiz, one of only two Mexi- i-American congressman to jpport sending military aid to Nicaraguan rebels, said he voted “ conscience and ignored poli- “Politically, the best thing for to have done was to go along with the rest of the Hispanic cau cus, vote against aid for the Con tras, see if we could get a good al ternative and then vote with the it of them,” Ortiz, D-Corpus risti, said during a visit to wnsville Saturday. Ortiz said he supported Presi- t Reagan’s plea for $100 mil- n in aid to the Nicaraguan re bels because he feared an extended negotiating period in ngress would give the Sandi- government time to mount ffensive against the rebels. Ortiz said he and Rep. Manuel Lujan Jr., R-N.M., were the only xican-American congressmen ote in favor of sending aid to Contras. New checkout time set for A&M residence halls By D.ANN BEELER Reporter Students living on campus this se mester may be forced to find time between finals to pack their belong ings, because they’ll have to check out of their dorm rooms by 3 p.m. instead of 5 p.m. on the last day of finals. Ron Sasse, associate director of student affairs, said students will re ceive information about this new checkout deadline as soon as the res ident advisers have been informed. “Due to a change in the finals scheduling, we’re closing residence halls sooner,” Sasse said. But according to Robert Lacey, Texas A&M registrar, there were no changes in the finals scheduling for this spring. Sasse said the new time change will make it easier for the staff to leave earlier and enable the custodial staff to get trash moved and things cleaned up. “If we finish up on Friday, we don’t have to pay the custodial staff overtime,” Sasse said. “Plus, the landfill is still open on Friday and we can get rid of all of the trash.” “If we extended the time limit or changed it to Sat urday, we’d just be post poning our problems or moving Friday’s problems to Saturday. ” — Ron Sasse, associate di rector of student affairs Sasse said students who don’t make the deadline will be charged a $ 15 or $20 administration fee. Vicki Neal, a fourth floor resident adviser in Hobby Hall, offered a dif ferent perspective on the deadline. Many girls put off moving out un til the last minute, she says. Out of 60 girls, at least 35 to 40 of them will wait until 30 minutes before the checkout deadline to move their be longings, she says. “That last week is absolutely ridic ulous!” Neal said. “We have to move out, inventory rooms and turn in our keys to the head resident by 12 noon on Saturday. “I don’t want to be here until Sun day. I want to leave here just as badly as everyone else.” Sasse said that under the new deadline there still will be plenty of time for students to get packed and moved out. “I suppose everyone must assess his own circumstances,” he said. “If we extended the time limit or changed it to Saturday, we’d just be postponing our problems or moving Friday’s problems to Saturday.” Pat Hoffman, resident adviser for Hart Hall, said the ruling won’t af fect that many students. Hoffman says if a student would pack during dead week and during finals week, packing wouldn’t be such a problem. “I think if you moved the deadline to Saturday at three in the af ternoon, someone would have a problem with that,” he added. Jay Halpin, a Puryear Hall resi dent adviser, said if a student needs to stay late due to extreme circum stances, he may seek special permis sion to spend the night and leave the following morning. utumn Hills deliberations continue Q I Associated Press , SAN ANTONIO — Despite twice ^ eporting a deadlock, a jury was or- ~ 5 fcred to return Monday and resume i Hiberations in the murder-by-ne- ect trial of a nursing home cor- Oration and four of its current and Drnier employees. State District Judge Don Morgan ve the panel Palm Sunday off af- r more than 25 hours of deliber- jions in the case against Autumn lills Convalescent Centers Inc. The nursing home and the em- joyees are charged in the Nov. 20, 978, death of Elnora Breed. The nritlw™- 016 woman died 47 days af- 1 ;r she was admitted to an Autumn tills nursing home in Texas City. The state contends the nursing home provided such poor care that Breed died of starvation and infec tion. The defense, however, claims Breed died of cancer. Jurors sent two notes to Morgan Friday indicating they were dead locked, but the judge instructed them to continue deliberating. The jury received the case Wednesday. Defense attorney Roy Barrera said the jury’s request to recess Sun day indicates “these people are no longer in a deliberative mood. “Obviously, they are not close (to a verdict),” he said, adding he thinks thejury is hopelessly deadlocked. But prosecutor Jim Vollers said thejury has “not indicated that they are deadlocked. It’d be my guess that they are making progress.” The jurors asked Saturday to look at the credentials of the individual defendants, a chart outlining the chain of command in the corpora tion and certain testimony from Au tumn Hills president Robert Gay. The testimony requested focused on Gay’s knowledge of state health department inspections of the Texas City nursing home. The health de partment withheld funds and put the nursing home on probation seve ral times in 1978. Thejury also asked to look at a re port prepared by a prosecution wit ness who did a study of the amount of Ensure, or liquid nutrient, on hand at the nursing home in 1978. Breed’s doctor ordered her to be fed 600 calories of the nutrient through a nasal tube daily. The report said there were many days the nursing home had no En sure on hand, but nurses charted it was given to patients. Morgan earlier instructed jurors they could also find the defendants guilty of involuntary manslaughter. A murder conviction would carry a penalty of five to 99 years or life for 1 the individuals and monetary dam ages for the corporation. Involuntary manslaughter carries a penalty of two to 10 years in prison. is nursing nonie in r exas c>uy. rnejury nas not inaicatea mat tney ot ensure, or liquid nutrient, on prison. fcmgers of hydrogen sulfide gas addressed Associated Press ie jury sens ting lastl How the e will nu , ODESSA — In farming country, it causes reasons d un g| un g,” l n rayon plants, it causes “spinner’s 5 whom! y e » ^ n( j j n jhg 0 jj Helds of West Texas and - said he roun( j t h e world, hydrogen sulfide can kill. Baraka' by-product from a cracked injection well secutors iear |y drove Debra Perrin insane after it asphyx- tclude iflfted seven of her family members and a friend >n. n a February 1975 tragedy in Denver City, 90 T j ct [udfillUes north of Odessa. > Mievt Tve got a good God,” said Perrin, 31, o interveiW lives in Bi g Spring. “If I didn’t, I’d be ! jht now.” More than 10 years later, she has finally ac ted her loss. But she can’t accept what she the public’s lack of concern about the con- t menace posed by hydrogen sulfide, the lessa American reported recently. The foul-smelling but invisible compound per cales the oil fields of West Texas, and safety ex- King Hyde calls it an insidious gas because it an kill people before they know they have even leen exposed. _ who crazy •lory ch latter, uni t it, there them to^l they strud said. Tto' Hyde, who owns Standby International, a Mid- land-Odessa company that manufactures and leases safety equipment for oil field use, said al though its odor is pungent — like rotten eggs, some say — hydrogen sulfide damps a victim’s sense of smell at about the same time it reaches fatal concentrations. In its lethality, hydrogen sulfide ranks just be hind hydrogen cyanide, the deadliest of natural gases, and is about six times more toxic than car bon monoxide. About 20,000 people in unincorporated west Odessa make their homes among oil and gas wells, pipelines and tank batteries — prime can didates for a hydrogen sulfide leak, the newspa per reported. Several residents in the Odessa area have com plained about the compound that is so corrosive that warning signs have to be specially coated so they won’t disintegrate. Hydrogen sulfide’s long-term effects are still unclear, although a 1977 National Institute for Occupational Safety and Health report said it can cause brain and nerve damage. But while that report urged further study, nothing substantial has been done, officials say. The federal government years ago recom mended stricter standards for worker exposure to the gas, but never pushed the proposal. To day’s U.S. exposure standard is nearly 20 years old and is double the level permitted in such countries as the Soviet Union. When amendments to state hydrogen sulfide rules were proposed in 1984, 25 oil and gas pro ducers spoke on the record against them and seven others took a neutral position. But although no one spoke in favor of the stricter safety measures during the Railroad Commission’s public hearings, the commission ers adopted the new rules in June 1985. Those guidelines require well and pipeline op erators and processors to train their employees to deal with hydrogen sulfide and to use only servic ing companies whose workers have received simi lar safety training. )A! The Association of E. -’s specif itment Is a perfr- 1 n high sea' > you eata lege, witf lus the N f Fund, h youa vJI laps in a 1. i give p l stoexpe"' mtside of hanceto* eet some ople, an< nt growf 1 mentalty road to toother., istmentia 1 your lota er today 10 ify. ECURin NG ., S .ll' ndi Spring Senior Induction Banquet Monday St Tuesday, April 7 St Q, 1986 6:30 p.m. MSC Room 224 All May graduates are invited to attend. Complimentary tickets will be available as long as they last, Mon., March 31, Tues., April 1 and Wed., April 2 in the lobby of the For syth Alumni Center. This is your invitation to attend the formal induction of all Class of '86 graduates. August grads Welcome. TICKETS GIVEN ON FIRST COME-FIRST SERVED BASIS cut here 1 Defensive Driving Course Mar. 25 & 26 Mar. 31 & April 1 College Station Hilton Pre-register by phone: 693-8178 Ticket deferral and 10% insurance discount i cut here CAMPUS INTERVIEWS FOR CONSTRUCTION JOBS April 4, 1986 Martin K. Eby Construction Company, Inc., one of the top 200 construction companies in the U.S., will be at Texas A&M on April 4 to interview May Construction Science graduates and Civil Engineers with construction options. We have both field engineering and estimating positions to fill. Our company does heavy civil, industrial and building construction work nationwide. Sign up in the Placement Office to interview and hear about our job opportunities. EEO/m/f/h HALLEY'S COMET FILM DEVELOPING SPECIAL $1.89 12 EXPOSURE $3.29 24 EXPOSURE $2.49 15 DISC EXPOSURE $4.49 36 EXPOSURE C-41 Color print film. 3*/2 x 5 Single prints only Offer good March 24 th —March 23“' 1986 PHOTOGRAPHIC SERVICES AT GOODWIN HALL & TEXAS A&M BOOKSTORE IN MSC / / ...jazzy, snazzy playing and outright virtuosity." —Seattle Times "These duo-pianists put Brahms next to Ragtime" wrote the New York Times of Katia and Marielle Labeque. MSC OfAS will present the Labeque Sisters March 27 at Texas A&M Rudder Auditorium. Sisters Katia and Marielle have per formed together since their childhood on the southwest coast of France. Both won first prize in the annual competitive examinations at the Paris Conservatoire in 1968. They have delighted audiences and critics ail over the world with their music. Their extraordinary music radiates freshness and excitement with In sightful renditions of Mozart, Brahms, Stravinsky, Gershwin and many Ragtime composers. The MSC Opera and Performing Arts Society brings great performers from all over the world. Don't miss the magic! Tickets are $8.75 for non students and $7.25 for students at the MSC Box Office, 845-1234. VISA and MasterCard accepted.