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About The Battalion. (College Station, Tex.) 1893-current | View Entire Issue (April 1, 1987)
Wednesday, April 1, 1987/The Battalion/Page 9 dot largest sJ n ilit arm; Salvador 1 killed orwoi total of 250, ftAgoewsaiilij foopsattheBi pn firing j mc annonai2j barracks ant I s were at the 1^; onded were i| e been infiltr- tbe terrorisa] andonsaid. cksandanolj rer buih iree destroyed DRUG TESTING WHAT ARE THE LIMITS? APRIL 6, 1987 9:00 a.m. THE GOVERNMENTS ROLE CONGRESSMAN JOE BARTON 12:00 p.m. THE TESTS : A SCIENTIFIC BACKGROUND DR. RAY ADAMS. PATHOLOGIST 3:00 p.m. BUSINESS : THE COURTS' LIMITS DAWN FINLAYSON, ATTORNEY OF LABOR LAW 301 RUDDER FREE ADMISSION 8:00 p.m. TESTING LN ATHLETICS : REGULATING THE EXCESS OR EXCESSIVE REGULATION JOHN L. TONER. NCAA COMM. CHAIRMAN, EDWARD CHEN. ACLU ATTORNEY; DR. JOHN LASETER, ENV1RO-HEALTH SYSTEMS DR. STEVEN P1COU. MODERATOR RUDDER THEATER ADMISSION $ 1.00 . _ quick as jfop ■ a flash, lv (AF id Tuesday t received i lessiotis, but a n the signifc ties avenge: • 26.28 pec the New ;e totaled I , against ! ious session utpaced det rgin, with S own and erences ora said the r the loneterc 1 has moved! from Post Oak Mall' to ^ 2^ 110 Dominik (at Culpepper Plaza) WE’RE NOW OPEN in a more convenient location with expanded services! ip and thefc|| aid it wouk to a trade. | j from Boise .#!| ostages arr; , ew Yod (■■■ g/i, tf<?, a’* j | esident ate at An-NduM showed a bfe[p*l irner weart § id blin . The that shadowy | ia t orders I' n u factored ;j ge in 1 rose A3 P vest showintr'I ut Februan | id the or4 f '| mp in 'b e signs th e vine this)' MANOR EAST MALL 779-0402 coupon ONE PRICE — ONE ROLL! For Only *3°° We will; • process & print 1 roll of C-41 color print film (includes 135,126,110 or Disc) OR • process & mount 1 roll of 35mm E-6 slide film 1 roll per coupon 1 coupon per visit Must present coupon before processing Good from April 1 thru May 15,1987 Good at Dominik location only % Wednesday 9 3 °-l 0 FREE HURRICANES 7-10 pm 103 University 268-0486 )V.m j 3rd man arrested in sex, spy scandal involving Marines WASHINGTON (AP) — A third Marine guard has been arrested in a burgeoning sex-and-spy scandal in the ranks of the Marine Corps’ secu rity guard force at the U.S. embassy in Moscow, the Pentagon said Tues day. Staff Sgt. Robert Stanley Stuffle- beam, 24, of Bloomington, III., was taken into custody on suspicion of failing to report contacts with Soviet women while working in Moscow from May 1985 to May 1986. He was arrested Sunday at Camp Pendleton, Calif. “Specifically, he is suspected of having associations with Soviet women on several occasions,” Penta gon spokesman Robert Sims said. Sims stressed that Stufflebeam had not been accused of espionage, as have two other former Moscow embassy guards. Stufflebeam had commanded the two, Sgt. Clayton J. Lonetree, 25, and Cpl. Arnold Bracy, 21. The Marines announced Monday that all 28 guards now at the em bassy will be replaced in April, but it said the others are not suspected of wrongdoing. The Marine Corps has charged that Lonetree escorted Soviet agents inside the embassy, shutting off se curity alarms that were tripped by the Russians, while Bracy stood guard. Lonetree also is accused of providing pictures and names of CIA agents on the embassy staff. “The damage was probably enor mous,” one source, speaking anony mously, has said. Although the Marines have re frained from making the charge publicly. Pentagon sources said both Lonetree and Bracy became in volved sexually with Soviet Women who worked on the embassy’s staff. Lonetree, in papers made public by his lawyer, William Kunstler, said that as an American Indian, “I guess some of my actions were based on hatred for prejudices . . . because of what the white man did to the In dian.” A Pentagon source, who agreed to discuss the newest development if not identified, said Stufflebeam had been arrested as a result of an effort “to pin down every contact that any guard could have had with a Soviet national.” The source said military investiga tors had been “appalled” to learn of the extent to which some of the guards fraternized with Soviet citi zens. Such fraternization is barred by military regulations governing guards assigned to communist coun tries. Highway plan veto voted down by House WASHINGTON (AP) — The House voted 350-73 Tuesday to override President Reagan’s veto of an $88 billion highway and mass- transit bill, sending the measure to the Senate for the final round of a bruising political struggle. The margin was 68 votes more than the two-thirds needed to over ride the president’s action on the bill, which couples more than 100 road projects made to order for indi vidual lawmakers with a provision permitting the states to raise the speed limit to 65 miles per hour on most stretches of interstate highway., Soon after the House voted, the Senate began debating the overricle motion. The Senate debated the veto for more than an hour Tuesday but postponed a vote until today. In the House, 248 Democrats and 102 Republicans — including GOP Leader Bob Michel of Illinois — cast their votes to override the veto. Michel noted the presence of funds in the bill to complete a high way widening project in his district, and said he was making a “very diffi cult, agonizing decision for the first time in the Reagan presidency.” Freshman GOP Rep. Arthur Ra- venel Jr. of South Carolina said, “You can bet your spring petunias this Congress will override the veto. President Reagan, he ain’t going to be running in 1988, but I am.” The White House made little dis- cerhible effofi to prevail in the House, and concentrated efforts in the Senate in what has become a test of Reagan’s political standing. Authorities say couple used fake contest to steal babies ATHENS, Ala. (AP) — A Wash ington state couple used a “Beautiful Baby Contest” as part of a 1980 scheme in which at least two new mothers in Texas and Alabama were killed and their babies abducted for sale, according to authorities still piecing the cases together. Harold Schut and Jackie Sue Schut, who are awaiting trial on murder charges in a 1980 baby ab duction and slaying in Athehs, may have been involved in six similar cases, according to a Texas investiga tor. Schut, who recently attempted to escape from the Limestone County Jail in north Alabama, is under a capital murder indictment in the killing of Geneva Clemons, 27, and the abuduction of her infant son in Athens on Jan. 21, 1980. Last week Schut was indicted in Houston on a kidnapping charge in an infant ab duction and the killing of the baby’s mother, Cheryl Ann Jones, 20, on MarchS, 1980. Chuck Rosenthal, an assistant dis trict attorney handling the case in Houston, told the Athens News Cou rier in a story published Tuesday that the Schuts may have been in volved in “at least six other such cases.” “I personally believe very strongly there are other instances of similar acts,” he said. He declined.to elaborate. Mrs. Schut, 34, is scheduled to stand trial May 4 on a murder charge in the slaying of Clemons, who was shot to death after Schut al legedly approached her about taking pictures of her 15-day-old baby for a magazine. Salaries (Continued from page 1) ulty salaries at A&M, saying that some faculty members do not see their future in Texas and have left for better opportunities. “We cannot expect to attract and retain the best academic talent with out competitive salaries,” he said. Adkisson said he is urging the Texas Legislature to increase fund ing for faculty salaries. “In recent legislative testimony before the Budget and Oversight Subcommittee of the House Higher Education Committee and before the Senate Finance Committee,” Ad kisson said, “I stated that increasing faculty salaries —- restoring their competitiveness — is my No. 1 prio rity.” On Tuesday, Adkisson said he had not yet seen the Coordinating Board’s report, but he is continuing his efforts in the Legislature to im prove faculty salary funding. Brown said some of the Coordi nating Board’s recommendations to the Legislature now are being con sidered in House and Senate com- mittees. One recommendation would bring faculty salaries back into step with the national average and eventually with the averages of the 10 most populous states with which A&M competes. “They’re working on versions of appropriations bills in both the House and in the Senate,” Brown said. “One version includes funds to bring higher education (appropria tions) back up to 1985 levels, plus enough to adjust for inflation.” • Books • Gifts • Supplies Hours: M-F 7:45-6 Sat 9-5 845-8681 UNLIMITED TANNING For one Month $35 at TANU Northqate 846-9779 PARIS $495 LONDON 429 CARACAS 350 HONG KONG 690 STOCKHOLM 590 RIO DE JANEIRO 640 Round-Trip from Houston! Plus EURAIL PASSES, INTL STUDENT ID! And many more STUDENT AIRFARES! Call for FREE Student Travel Catalog! COUNCIL TRAVEL 1904 Guadalupe, Austin, 78705 1-800-252-3565 The OrhER Eclips 25% discount on all hair products • Paul Mitchell • Tigi • Don Sullivan • Redkin • Bain De Terre • Sebastian S. Texas Ave. Next to Winn Dixie, C.S. 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Alvin H. Prause, M.D., F.A.A.P. Kathleen H. Rollins, M.D., F.A.A.P. Robert H. Moore, M.D., F.A.A.P. MANDELA A Film Sponsored by Students Against Apartheid TONIGHT AT 8:30 Room 604 Rudder