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DALLAS] ^HILTON 1914 Commerce Street • Dallas, Texas 75201 • (214) 747-7000 or (800) HILTONS Page 6/The Battalion/Tuesday, December 9, 1986 Baylor appeal overrulr in discrimination case c< NEW ORLEANS (AP) — Baylor College of Medicine in Houston ille gally discriminated against Jewish doctors who wanted to practice at a Saudi Arabian medical complex used by the country’s royal family, a federal appeals court ruled Monday. The 5th U.S. Circuit Court of Ap peals in New Orleans upheld a lower court ruling that Baylor discrimi nated against Jewish doctors on its staff by not allowing them to work at the King Faisal Hospital in Riyadh, Saudi Arabia. In its ruling, however, the appeals court said the lower court’s award of $280,000 for attorneys’ fees was too high and must be reset by the U.S. District Court in Houston. Baylor administrators had not re ceived a copy of the court ruling and did not know if it would be ap pealed, college spokeswoman Susan nah Griffin said. However, the program at the Saudi Arabia hospital was disconti nued in June 1985, she said. Baylor anesthesiologists Lawrence Abrams and Stuart Linde filed suit in 1982 after they were not allowed to join heart surgery teams going to Faisal Hospital. Their attorney, Stuart M. Nelkin, said he could not characterize the significance of the ruling since the program has been discontinued. Abrams now practices in New York, but Linde is still at Baylor, he said. Linde said Monday he had no com ment on the ruling. The two doctors were told they would not he able to get entry visas for Saudi Arabia because they are Jewish, according to the ruling. “There is no evidence in the re cord that the statement represented the actual position of the Saudi gov ernment with regard to the partici pation of Jews in the program,” the 5th Circuit said. “In addition, there is no evidence that Baylor even attempted to ascer- tUS ;who hi tain the of ficial positionolJpland £ government on this issut jthe sat ing said. Hpre The 5th Circuit noted: jAfericu chael DeBakey, headofi Hifjito st hot>1, testified that hetiiiBfrhe hie getting visas for Jevlshowca: cians to see special patie: icon Id ii Arabia. Bne 1 he lower court awanieBjtxluci $156,840 in aiuial dam^Hte \ Linde $248,982. DantlChiistn $248,982. DairJChristn based on the amountoftMifll tl would have earned if thelare agr ticipated in the program, kin. 1st Under the programj4"With i diovascular surgeons,artIcause tl ists .uul other operatingitilChiistrr ei s were sent to worfBINech months at Faisal Hospital, an inter a news < .dal is or Although the hospna. k job is to care for andtreai*Bhgh royal family, it also aan^F^d Saudi citizens withpartici cult illnesses, thecourtsa Perot attacks business but not GM chairman in luncheon speech DETROIT (AP) — The more than 7,000 people who attended H. Ross Perot’s luncheon speech on Monday hoping to see sparks fly be tween he and General Motors Corp. Chairman Roger Smith instead got a Perot critique on the problems of American business. The Economic Club of Detroit luncheon has been one of the hottest tickets in town since GM’s board of directors several weeks ago voted to buy out Perot, the company’s biggest shareholder and its loudest critic, for $750 million. But on Monday, Perot and Smith sat smiling at each other on the po dium, and Smith introduced Perot with a variety of flattering superla tives. “Ross Perot is a triumphant entre preneur in the best of American tra dition,” Smith said. “The company he started mirrors his own entrepreneurial vigor with its aggressive, can-do culture,” he said. “His loyalty to his employees and theirs to him is legendary.” Earlier, Perot had told a news con ference that he never expected GM to buy him out, and proposed a buyout only as an alternative to three other solutions for improving the performance of the nation’s big gest automaker. Smith said Electronic Data Sys tems, which Perot founded with $1,000 in 1962 and sold to GM for $2.5 billion in 1984, “will continue to be a powerful engine in GM’s drive toward cost-efficient, electronically integrated operations.” GM bought out Perot for $750 million and three top EDS exec utives for $50 million late last month in return for Perot’s resignation from the board a n a the chairmanship of EDS. Part of the agreement included an arbitration board that would deter mine penalties of up to $7.5 million if either side criticized the other. In his introduction. Smith made only one reference to his highly pub licized and costly split with Perot. “Now yes, we do have our differ ences on means and methods and Ross and I may not always see eyc- to-eye on how to get things clone.” Smith said. “But we certainly do agree on what needs to he* done. In his speech, Perot stressed the value of the enterprising individual and criticized big business in general without mentioning GM, hut many of his remarks were repeats of com ments he had made about GM in the past. Texas farm take hard in 1985-191 Pc n Bice: 'dueia AUSTIN (AP)—Del lelt the brunt of thefE f rom 1982 to 19811m farms got hit hardesn: 1986, the Texas Agnct:. tistical Service says. “Texas showed thelii] cline in the nation in of farms from the 1985 to the summerof mg 17,000 farms, cian Dennis Findley aid The report said the nature of Texas a[ the conservatism of Ttfi ers helped staveofffam f rom 1982 to 1981, »i Mid west and other paffi country were sufferinjuiid “With crops such as tit' cotton and ^rain, axipld fruits, soybeans cialty products andksii were able to sidesep losses for several vein" said. “Now, Texas farm ec: suffering just like \l is parts of the country.Th of this economic press® now taking its toll in Findley said. Findley, said the dnf revenues was probablvii cause for the recentlossoii ounc Fou nside a n n this in young “No bende vho th |Sgt. W Win MS, Stwo gi iblue 1 I dark [state lit Som Ishootii [Wrigh ] indicat [tone.” Polit I tended Child’s cocaine death act as catalyst for community HEREFORD (AP) — Residents here still don’t consider their little farming community a drug capital, but the cocaine death of a 9-year-old boy shocked them into action. On Aug. 17, two weeks before he was to start the third grade, Manuel Saucedo died of a severe allergic re action to a small amount of cocaine, according to forensic pathologists. How he got the drug remains a mystery and under investigation. But the fact that such a young child died from drugs has become a focal point for worried parents and school officials. The school board seriously is con sidering getting a drug-sniffing dog. The local Elks Club recently spon sored a drug paraphernalia exhibit at the Hereford Community Center parking lot. A program showing teachers how to spot drug use among students was started ahead of schedule. A panel of experts on illegal drugs spoke to a standing-room-only crowd of parents shortly after the cause of Manuel’s death was re ported. “And we were competing with Monday night football that night,” recalls Mary Johnson, a deputy with the Deaf Smith County Sheriffs Of fice. Marc Williamson, assistant super intendent for instruction in the Hereford Independent School Dis trict, said, “This is not the drug capi tal of the world. I moved here be cause of the traditional values this community engenders — trustwor thiness, respect, honesty.” On the wall of his office is a large color picture of his two children, a 6- year-old girl and a 3-year-old boy. The same picture, unframed, is on his desk. “But anyone who says we don’t have a drug problem is sticking his head in the sand,” said Williamson, a native of San Marcos. “What I think has happened is . . . (Manuel’s death) has helped crystal lize efforts,” Williamson said. “It acts as a catalyst to bring the community together.” Manuel was among the 5,000 chil dren in the school district in Deaf Smith County. He died from a severe allergic re action to a minute amount of co caine, said forensic pathologist Ralph Erdmann, who conducted the autopsy. Erdmann says Manuel must have been exposed to cocaine previously in order for the child’s slight body to develop a hypersensitivity to it. At first, the town wondered how a 9-year-old boy in a town of 18,000 got involved with drugs in the first place. Then it became concern that if it could happen to Manuel, it could happen to others. Jeri Curtis Shire, news editor at the Hereford Brand, didn’t wait to find out. know what cl# I You never to hit. “We’re not goingtobei that (drugs) as soon as 30, anc tOi Houston, but wellgetil, d th “I don’t have any children, but I know a lot of kids through church,” she said. “I get tired of the small town feeling that if we ignore it, it’ll go away, the ‘not my kids’ syndrome. lAUSTl say Texa Soon after tlienewsofi! , | 11 „ , i.tiuptheeai ..■I,,,,.1 spread arMi^«^ nWre . ailed Deputy Johiu» J L e L e organized the paneloffc. who spoke to a large ? *j“ r 1 ents. “Dr. Tim Revel),the® Manuel the night hedifi surprise visit,” Johnson ! stood a 9-year-old on ai'' all those people and tol(w alive,’ meaning that «j men ;‘; f ^ something. fc nt or wl I alk about getting PR tncorr mates be Tiiucs He Before 69 percen percentag |The co Blood tim att 5".V° n ” , r i sen. R; Williamson said, ll lir ( ee w j|j t the gate after thecowsgo:[ wk . lher 1( “But one (dead vT many. or the rule Farabet Port of Houston woiOrt license, train gi/d fa* HOUSTON (AP) — At least one police union says it will take the Port of Houston to court to force the agency either to train its 78 armed guards or eliminate the positions. The Port of Houston has been empowered by law to operate an un licensed police force since the 1920s. State law, however, was changed last year to require all governmental agencies with police-type forces to train their officers by state standards and obtain licenses for them. The port is the only political sub division in Texas to refuse to license its officers either as policemen or se- curity guards, according to spokesmen for the Texas Commis sion on Law Enforcement Officer Standards and Education and the Texas Board of Private Investigators and Private Security Agencies. Private security guards must now be registered with the investigators board, but guards for governmental entities were left in a gray area, the spokesmen said. f RICH The port authority*1 aml wil< month to change its sign* . , , Pol.tc" to Ton v fp i. spokesman Lee Velasaiq , ai K nel i7i .u n 1 hunters 1 Vela says tht ^ » end hun| hmugli the ijHJ ofricU lraining needed tot** 1 otfrwhd cunty guards. f ne.mle u “They’re playing aj j£ e J. nm sa.d Ron DeLord, pr«( five milej 7,000-member CoroT") [ j )ere forcement Association® f rom ()t , () DeLord wrote the 4 that required governin' 1 ] hunting f to train and licensetlif'M “p u| , from pec Fred Toler, execuii' 1 f rom pec the law enforcement j rnann sa j said state law allowsF, hunters v sioners to decide whft j Septemtx cers are policeorsean' j been ITIle Parks a Once the board guards were security were shielded from h agencies’ rules, hesaid | a,