Page 8/The Battalion/Wednesday, July 15, 1987 A ■ M «•» p gjj| m CLINICS AM/PM Clinics Minor Emergencies 10% Student Discount with ID card 3820 Texas Ave. Bryan, Texas 846-4756 401 S. Texas Ave. Bryan, Texas 779-4756 8a.m.-11 p.m. 7 days a week Walk-in Famity Practice con viser- miller CDO I review GET THE CONVISER CONFIDENCE 5 • Course Materials Include 5 Textbooks • 3 Month Format • Payment Plan Available/Major Credit Cards • Exam Techniques Clinic 76% PASS RATE A subsidiary of Harcourt Brace Jovanovich Classes start at 6 p.m. on August 11 at the College Station Hilton Call for: Dates Information Course Locations Free Conviser-Miller Sample Outline! $50.00 COUPON con viser-miller Name: Address: 1-800- 392-5441 I I City/St/Zip: Phone: Present this coupon at registration for tuition discount or mail in now. ^ ATLAS tfAAMSMISSlOM We pledge to do the best! TRANSMISSION TUNE-UP • Remove Pan and Inspect Transmission For Wear • Adjust Linkage and Bands • Refill With Mew Fluid • Clean Screen • Clean Pan, Install Mew Pan Gasket • Check Transmission & Converter Area for Leaks • Check Vacuum Modulator • Road Test for Performance RESEAL SPECIAL NATIONWIDE GUARANTEE 1507 Texas Ave. Bryan 779-0555 Includes front seal rear seal, pan gasket, and lever seal. Call for appt. or drop by! locally owned by Stanley Poteet Don’t Worry when an accident or sudden illness occurs CarePlus is open when you need them 7 days a week with affordable medical care. Pharmacy now open 7 days a week for your convenience CarePlus Medical/Dental Center 696-0683 1712 S.W. Parkway • C.S. Open Sam - 8pm facross from Kroger Center) World and Nation =55 |P Clinic seeks women to donate eggs to assist infertile couples /ol CLEVELAND (AP) — The Cleve land Clinic announced Tuesday it will recruit women to donate eggs for couples unable to have children in what is believed to be the first pro gram in the nation to use a pool of anonymous donors. The donor and recipient will be matched according to physical char acteristics but will remain unknown to each other, a clinic official said. The donor will supply the egg that the recipient is unable to provide. “I think the proper way of using donor eggs is the way that most pro grams use donor sperm — appropri ately screened, appropriately matched but anonymous donors,” said Dr. Martin M. Quigley, director of the clinic’s In Vitro Fertilization and Embryo Replacement Program. Quigley estimates there are more than 100,GOO women in the United States who are unable to have chil dren because their ovaries don’t pro duce eggs, they don’t have ovaries, or their eggs are defective or carry an inherited disease. The Oocyte Donation Program was approved by the clinic’s board Tuesday. The Cleveland Clinic is a renowned medical center that in- Quigley said the clinic's in-vitro fertilization program has a success rate on the first attempt of 15 per cent to 20 percent. Under the clinic’s guidelines, the donor must be aged 18 to 35, and it “I think the proper way of using donor eggs is the way that most programs use donor sperm — appropriately screened, appropriately matched but anonymous do nors. ” — Dr. Martin M. Quigley, program director The donors and recipientsc matched according to nationals gin, height, weight, hair coloil color and blood type, thesanit| of matching that is done mited sperm. Unlike sperm donation, I limited health risks fortheejl nor, Quigley said. Those risksi raise some ethical questions) Lori B. Andrews, an attorney the American Bar Federationinj eago, who wrote a book about): tility treatments. eludes an outpatient clinic, a 950- bed hospital and research facilities. The clinic plans to use the so- called test-tube baby technique to fertilize the donor eggs. The eggs would be surgically removed from the donor and fertilized in a labo ratory by the sperm of the recipient’s husband. The embryos then would be put in the recipient's uterus. married, must have her husband’s consent. She will have to pass a phys ical and psychological screening, and cannot be related to or know the re cipient. Ehe recipient couple must be married. The woman must have a healthy uterus, and the man must have a sufficient sperm count for fertilization. Andrews expects egg domd inc lude medical students, then source of donated sperm, women who sympathize with J with infertility problems. In general, she said, thei who gives birth has been recop as the legal mother, and shet expect me use of donated e$| change that. T he cost to the couple isestiiri at S5.000 for a single attempt. |Nat jl’oii [nev< lusin Ithe jres litic; lleak B Iden Whi gan |the tugs app | late Legislation to upgrade airline servia completed, sent to full Senate for OK |tage T I that Iwhic I,staU I fort lerat ! host R he c WASHINGTON (AP) — A Sen ate committee completed work Tuesday on a bill that would prod the nation’s airlines to improve serv ice, while a Senate clash loomed over a House-passed measure banning smoking on most domestic flights. Legislation sent to the full Senate would require the nation’s airlines to provide monthly reports to the gov ernment of their on-time records, canceled flights, lost luggage and bumped passengers. The government, in turn, would be required to issue monthly reports, which Senate aides said would likely appear in the government’s Federal Register and be distributed in news releases to reporters. It would also require the Trans portation Department to establish a toll-free phone number to handle complaints from the rapidly growing ranks of unhappy airline travelers. The bill, approved by the Senate Commerce, Science and Transporta tion Committee, is opposed by the Air Transport Association, which represents U.S. airlines. Thirteen American carriers have asked the Transportation Depart ment to compose a similar reporting system, although participation would be voluntary. “We don’t think there ought to be legislation,” Bill Jackman, a trans port association spokesman, said. In a letter to members of the Sen- House votes to bon smoking on flights of 2 hours or less WASHINGTON (AP) — The House on Monday voted to ban ciga rette smoking on airline llights of two hours or less, ignoring tobacco- state lawmakers anil others who in sisted more evidence is needed on the hazards of passive smoke. Rep. Harold Rogers, R-Ky., told his colleagues that Congress should more closely scrutinize the proposal before making a judgment, arguing that the proposal amounted to “a rather serious modification of American life.” The proposal, passed by a 198- 193 vote, was an amendment to $26.6 billion transportation spend ing bill for fiscal 1988. The Reagan administration has already dubbed the overall bill too costly and threat ened to veto it. The smoking ban was introduced by Reps. Richard Durbin, D-lti., and C.W. Bill Young, R-Fla., who ran into arguments that the measure should be studied further by con gressional committees with jurisdic tion over the issue. Instead, Durbin and Young argued that the question was an easy one to decide because it is a question of the public’s health. “Let me suggest to you that this is a deadly serious issue,” Durbin said. The bill was to appropriate $11.1 billion in new spending for next year and release up to $15.7 billion in spending from the highway and air port trust funds, which are built up from fuel taxes and other user fees. But under an amendment offered by Rep. Nancy Johnson, R-Conn., the lawmakers voted 218-166 to cut 2 percent of the appropriated money, or about $250 million, from the bill. ate commerce panel released 1 ues- day, Transportation Secretary Eliza beth H. Dole also indicated opposition to the Senate measure. She noted that her agency is con sidering consumer protection regu lations and argued that the bill “will rule out potentially better ap proaches to airline consumer protec tion” because it would not leave enough time for analysis. Federal regulations requiring the reporting would have to be ready within 90 days of the bill’s final approval. Premier of Ukraine, eight others removed from office in shakeup Consumer legislation has ) moving through Congress this j in response to growing compa from airline customers about) service. The House aviationsutki mil tee plans to write its vera the legislation next week. On another front, battle lint- gan being drawn in the Senatti) measure the House approved: Monday that would prohibit ] rette smoking in airline flightsef hours or less. Such a prohira would mean an end to smolitd 80 percent of domestic U.S. fl™ Rep. Richard Durbin, D ill proposal’s chief sponsor, said hi searching for supporters in the ate. “I think it will be much toujjl he said of the measure’s prosp the Senate. The Senate, unlike I louse, allows filibusters—effot kill legislation with the threatofi limited debate. T he measure is an amendmeitj the transportation appropriat bill for fiscal 1988 that the House proved. The Reagan administn lias threatened to veto the en| measure — which would $26.6 billion in spending—sayi is too expensive Durbin said be will seek the port of members of the Senate propriations Committee, which nave to approve that chambers sion of the spending bill 1] the 1 time aboi seve C host Fitz reca citec disa P the cans rass P mui his' H pro] (lB tor hun gua: was earl Nir, he scri] won it. vers | hav< prol P mac MOSCOW (AP) — The premier of the Ukraine has been ousted along with at least eight other top officials there in a shakeup that may be related to the area’s eco nomic problems. Not directly affected by the changes is Ukrainian Communist Party chief Vladimir V. Shcherbitsky, but the departure of several of his key aides suggests his power base may have eroded. Shcherbitsky is one of the last of the Soviet old guard to retain his influential seat on the country’s 14-mem ber national ruling body, the Politburo. The Ukraine is the Soviet Union’s most populous re public after the Russian Federation. The reshuffle was made during a meeting of the Ukrainian Supreme Soviet last week. The reason behind it was not stated in reports on the shakeup in Ukrainian newspapers that reached the So viet capital on Tuesday. It appeared, however, to be another step in Soviet leader Mikhail S. Gorbachev’s effort to restructure the Soviet economy. Saturday’s issue of Pravda Ukrainy, the republic’s party newspaper, said the 69-year-old Shcherbitsky took part in the session that ordered the retirements. Those ousted, however, were mostly long-time party and government bureaucrats seen as the backbone of Shcherbit sky’s power. The government department chiefs responsible for finance, planning and crucial consumer industries were among those removed, indicating the shakeup was prompted by “perestroika,” Gorbachev’s effort to re structure the economy. Pravda Ukrainy said republic Premier Alexander P. Lyashko, 71, was retired after 15 years in the post and replaced by the Ukraine’s planning chief, Vitaly A. Ma- sol. Sunday’s issue of the newspaper listed eight other re public: officials removed from the Council of Ministers, a vast Cabinet-like body composed of the heads of all government departments. Iraq attacks Iranian oilfields in Persian Gulf MANAMA, Bahrain (AP)- Iraq attacked offshore Irani;] oilfields Tuesday in the Peril; Gulf war, which appeared to!' intensifying before the arrival c j lal reflagged Kuwaiti tankers at their U.S. Navy escorts. A communique issued inBal dad said Iraqi warplanes stm Iran’s Rakhsh oilfields eastof(! wee ] tar, in the southern gull,and: ter targets were “engulfed in fire.' Other jets bombed Farsiyali land and attacked Iran’s main export terminal on Kharglslat in the northern gulf for fourth time sinceJune 20. Maritime salvage executt based in the gulf said Iraqi plat inflicted heavy damage on HISS THE DEADLINE for GRADUATION ^ ANNOUNCEMENTS • AT A&M NEARLY EVERYBODY ■ | park (36,000 active, affluent Aggies) Don’t Sweat - We Can Help - Call Today CIOO ** Off AGGIELAND PRINT SHOP I L. with ad expires 7/31/87 i Quick Quality Printing dJ 693-8621 1801 Holleman • College Station end ■ T /• wou dela U.S. Kuw war: thro Sc chiei sal, am | wroi Bi that Unit war Iraq W crats vote: sena j°bl Reads The Battalion