The Battalion. (College Station, Tex.) 1893-current, September 02, 1986, Image 11

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    Tuesday, September 2, 1986/The Battalion/Page 11
louch
By Jim Earle
ons
?v. (AP)~hj
Day Teltthu
096,773 Mot
e S400 milfo
''ear histon
I the Musculi
iation, bent:
>n, would ra:
>0 million it
ts from dottt
vie and proft
. this is section ~><) 1. ;ind / 'll he \ om instructor pro\ ided u tux bill is
passed, linnls .tie uppropriuted. and the Legislature feels it can afford
wormy position to he continued . ..
many of wli
of which stn
* poignant n
ion came wht
)itt told of
-vear-old
focused abt
own." Rabi
aking. "Son
ire of the dii
vas born wi
I a transp
save his lift
■ ear’s goal
the rec
omb hits store
South Africa;
8 hurt in blast
fl*OHAN\ESBL’R(., S
[A] | — A bomb lef t at
mth Afri
the pan
and packages while shop-
■met Monday blew out
ore than iwstore in a middle-class white sob
er promix A'^Durban. Police said 1H blacks
m whites were injured, including a
■ear-old girl.
Hit fry McDonald, a pharmacist.
Iff “The whole place was filled
lit smoke within minutes. There
V las chaos. People were sc t eaming
ll nmning."
■ l)t. John Keenan, ac ting c hief of
lergency services for Natal prov-
le, said the 3-year-olcl white child
ndergoinj 'and lour other people were seriously
wo days, wounded. The government and wit-
Ises said the casualties were 12
dents —wi
i IpWyees and six c ustomc
Rachel •t W3S t |, e ninth hotnhin
since the
a nationwide
une 12 and
ands of peo-
» - e,
■da — art merntnent imposed
said. lie „(' emergence |
Irted arresting thous
sundenver: k| e without charges.
20, only twof
ransplantst'My'etuon Mitchell, general man
ager of Pick ’it Pay, a chain of budget
department stores, said the bomb
h died afe.demolished vise front windows oi
irred in T oneol the chain’s stores in the Mont-
n London, ffin shoppihg center and tore a hole
in the ceiling.
ri ■Hesaid ihc' hotnh was deposited at
* 1 thl counter where customers leave
their
ping.
Government spokesmen said one
of those seriously injured was the
cigarette seller, Monica Strydom,
who had wounds on her head and
hands. A witness said she was ‘‘cov
eted with blood."
Two of the previous bombings oc
culted in Durban. Eight people have
been killed and 145 wounded in the
nine explosions, the last of which
was Aug. 2 in Walvis Bay on the At
lantic coast.
No one has claimed responsibility
lot any of the attacks, but the gov
ernment blames guerrillas of the Af
rican National Congress, which is
outlawed in South Africa. ANC
headquarters in Lusaka, Zambia, has
refused to confirm or deny involve
ment.
According to government figures,
284 people have been killed in racial
unrest since June 12.
The Pick n Pay chain was the tar
get of a nationwide strike by more
than ('>,<)()() black workers last May
that affected 40 of its 90 stores and
closed 14. The strike ended weeks
ago, and there was no indication of a
connection between it and Monday’s
bombing.
ing more
,y urban and
economic
msformaW 1
•d with nati<]
rses of f orI1
ensation
’ he said.
) W ourselves
false face
ns in there 1
believe the'
ness and c«
Group plans suit
fbgainst Pentagon
ver war research
it
Nissan
)% dis-
gissan
ted a*
itomefs
WASHINGTON (AP) —An envi-
jjfimental activist group is prepar-
to sue the Pentagon to stop de
cisive biological warfare research
while simultaneously establishing a
_ -«33rtr uil( ^ t0 mrcourage sc ientists to dis-
iW?W^|lo\( evidence of illegal experi-
i m A Hi ,m m ' s '
CZIIf iTi'he Eoundation on Economic
Bends, successful in a similar suit
against the Army, also has distrib-
|p a position paper to officials
iem more than 55 foreign govern
ments, suggesting ways to
strengthen a 1972 international
actord banning the pursuit of bi
ological weapons.
jDelegates from more than 100
Rintries are scheduled to meet in
■neva next week to review the
1972 accord.
■The foundation’s paper disputes
the recently outlined position of the
■agan administration that the 1972
Biological and Toxin Weapons Con
vention “must be recognized as crit-
lly deficient and unfixable.”
The Washington-based research
organization has focused its studies
i|recent years on developments in
■logical and genetic engineering.
Be group describes itself as a
Bearinghouse for public informa
tion on the political, economic and
environmental implications of such
arch.
he lawsuit against the Pentagon,
Ropy of which was provided to re-
ihrters in advance of its filing in
IS. District Court today, seeks to
step all Defense Department re-
■tch aimed at identif ying potential
J Blcnses against biological weapons.
Tl^^t'nder ^ ie 1972 agreement, the
$ l^ji Tinted States, Soviet Union and
J fine than 100 other countries have
not to develop toxic biologi
cal agents for offensive purposes.
But the accord does not prohibit de
fensive research.
Mu
The foundation’s suit asserts that
the Defense Department has ex
panded defensive research to such a
point that it now falls under the Na
tional Environmental Policy Act,
meaning environmental impact
studies must be performed.
It requests both preliminary and
permanent injunctions against con
tinued research until environmental
impact studies are conducted.
The suit is similar to a successful
court action brought by the founda
tion against the Army. A federal
judge issued an injunction in May
1985 that has stopped the Army
f rom building a new biological labo
ratory at the Dugway Proving
Grounds in Utah until it completes
an impact study.
The Pentagon declined comment
on the latest challenge, noting that it
had not seen the suit.
Foundation president Jeremy Rif-
kin said a $100,000 whistle-blower’s
fund that the group is setting up is
designed “to protect scientists and
their families who might suffer re
prisals including loss of job and in
come and government harassment
for publicly disclosing illegal biologi
cal weapons research.”
Rifkin said (he foundation estab
lished the fund thanks to a gift
“from an anonymous donor.”
He added the foundation haci al
ready mailed details of the fund to
10,000 microbiologists in the United
States and would soon attempt mail
ings to scientists in Europe.
As for the international confer
ence scheduled to get underway
Sept. 8 in Geneva, Rifkin said the
foundation was attempting to alert
delegates that the “missile gap para
noia of the early 1960’s ... is about
to be joined by the ‘gene gap’ para
noia of the 1980s.”
J ; :,Uv
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