The Battalion. (College Station, Tex.) 1893-current, March 24, 1986, Image 8

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Page 8/The Battalion/Monday, March 24, 1986
South Koreans hold rail'
to protest government L
Associated Press
PUSAN, South Korea — Tens of
thousands of people filled the streets
and cheered dissident leader Kim
Young-sam Sunday in the biggest
anti-government rally since Presi
dent Chun Doo-hwan assumed
power in 1980.
In a speech, Kim Young-sam said
the overthrow of President Ferdi
nand E. Marcos in the Philippines
last month “gave us a good lesson,”
and that he hopes Chun pays heed
and “will not be a second Marcos."
The major opposition New Korea
Democratic Party called the rally to
launch the Pusan branch of its drive
for signatures supporting constitu
tional changes.
The opposition wants direct presi
dential elections to replace the elec
toral college system, which it says fa
vors the president and his governing
Democratic Justice Party.
Party officials claimed up to
40,000 people turned out. Neutral
observers put the number at around
20,000. Authorities gave no esti
mate.
Kim Young-sam is considered al
most a hometown boy in Pusan. He
was born on Koje Island, just south
of this port city of about 4 million
people on the southern Korean pen
insula, and received his early school
ing in Pusan.
practiced restraint in handling li
throng surging around the i
meeting site.
The theater had a reporteds
ing capacity of 2,500, but
4,000 overflowed the aisles andk
Du
Kim Young-sam called for a irf. Top
ing with Chun and 'Kim Daejun ^71-50
South Korea’s other leading d» .fought
dent, “to help break the currentf 67 Suin
litical stalemate.” B>ga> nst
The opposition gathering was the
biggest in South Korea since the
electoral college named Chun, for
merly a powerful major general in
the army, as president in 1980.
Government authorities did not
interfere with the rally, which had
been well publicized, and police
Kim Dae-jung still is under an
pended prison sentence on a W hips,
tion conviction. He tried tocotr
the rally, but police stopped
Seoul.
However, a tape recording I Idomin;
made in advance was played att
meeting, and the crowd heard I: ;ames,
declare that the struggle fordei®
racy must go on
Academy Awards’
58th ceremony
to be held tonight
Associated Press
HOLLYWOOD — The 58th Aca
demy Awards will be presented to
night amid a larger-than-usual col
lection of stars and expectations that
the ceremonies could produce one
of Oscar’s legendary surprises.
Unlike the previous three years
when the best movie winner was pre
dictable, the race among the five
nominees for best film achievement
of 1985 has resulted in no strong fa
vorite.
In recent times the star power in
the audience was largely limited to
E resenters and nominees. Donen
as remedied that by inviting past
winners to sit in the audience.
Among those who accepted were
Sidney Poitier, Lee Marvin, Olivia de
Havilland, Robert Duvall, Jose Fer
rer, Joan Fontaine and Ernest Borg-
“Out of Africa,” a romantic trian
gle set in the vivid landscape of colo
nial Africa, seems like a good mid
dle-of-the-road choice.
But there also is strong support
for “Prizzi’s Honor,” a comedy-
drama of duplicity in the Mafia un
derworld, and “Kiss of the Spider
Woman,” the prison-cell battle of
wills between a fiery revolutionary
and a movie-mad homosexual.
The acting nominees also are ex
pected to be present, with one ex
ception. Harrison Ford, nominated
as best actor for “Witness,” is filming
“The Mosquito Coast” in Belize, for
merly British Honduras, with Aus
tralian Peter Weir, nominee for his
direction of “Witness.”
Nor will Paul Newman appear in
person to accept his special Oscar for
sle
“The Color Purple,” the drama of
a black farm woman’s lifelong strug
gle for self-worth, appeared to be
out of the running when the film’s
11 nominations did not include di
rector Steven Spielberg, responsible
for such box-office hits as “E.T.” and
“Indiana Jones.”
But the Directors Guild award to
Spielberg on March 8 indicated he
does indeed have adherents in the
film community.
“his many memorable and compel
ling screen performances and for his
personal integrity and dedication to
his craft.” Newman will accept from
Chicago, where he is filming “The
Color of Money,” an update of “The
Hustler.”
The other nominees for best actor
are William Hurt for “Kiss of the
Spider Woman,” James Garner for
“Murphy’s Romance,” Jon Voight
for “Runaway Train,” and Jack
Nicholson for “Prizzi’s Honor.”
A split vote could result in a best-
picture Oscar for “Witness,” which
chronicles a cop chase through
Pennsylvania Amish country.
Monday night’s gala promises to
be the most star-studded in recent
years, thanks to recruiting by pro
ducer Stanley Donen.
Nominees for best actress are Me
ryl Streep for “Out of Africa,”
Whoopi Goldberg for “Color Pur
ple,” Jessica Lange for “Sweet
Dreams,” Anne Bancroft for “Agnes
of God,” and Geraldine Page for
“Trip to Bountiful.”
Alan Alda, Jane Fonda and Robin
Williams will act as hosts for the
broadcast on ABC, which begins at 9
p.m. EST.
Ohio man
gets Jarvik-7
transplant
Associated Press
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PITTSBURGH — A 45-yts
old factory foreman suffered a:
diac arrest three timesjustbefe
surgeons implanted ajarvik-l*
tificial heart as an emergencyll
saver, hospital officials said Sui
day.
Hospital spokeswoman k
Metzger said Gary Blake of Ea
Liverpool, Ohio, was in critia
but stable condition in the inttt
sive care unit of Presbyteriai
University Hospital.
She said that was the usualcot-
dition for a new recipient of £
artificial heart.
Spokesman Tom Chakuni/:
said that “death was immineni
before Blake received the i»
chanical pump in a five-hourop
eration that ended just befon
midnight Saturday.
“There was no other medid
option,” Chakurda said Sunda>
“As with all implants of theji’
vik-7 at Presby, the patients areii
a crisis situation.”
Blake’s heart stopped and wai
revived three times prior tosut’
gery, he said, but surgeons di
scribed the operation as “uncom
plicated.”
Blake’s implant marked dit
third time Presbyterian-Uniwt
sity Hospital has used thejarvik’
on an interim basis until a human
heart can be found. Chakurdi
said Blake’s name will be placet
on a list of candidates for a hi
man heart once he recovers suffi
ciently from the surgery.
Blake, who suffered fromade
generation of the heart muscle
from unknown causes, wastrans
ferred to the hospital March 12it
await a human heart transplant
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