Wednesday, August 26, 1987AThe Battalion/Page 11 World and Nation chool foils bomb scare ifter AIDS carriers return iRCADIA, Fla. (AP) — A bomb threat forced temporary evacuation of an elementary school Tuesday when three brothers exposed to the AIDS virus arrived for their second day of class under court orders. ■Later, a caller to the school ad ministrative offices simply said Boom” and hung up, said DeSoto County Sheriff Joe Varnadore. Af ter the first call, the school was searched, nothing was found and routines were resumed, said Larry Browning, school superintendent. ■“We’ll get to the bottom of this, particularly if they call again and I’ll press charges,” Browning said, call- lollor's rally pushes market to new high NEW YORK (AP) — The stock arket moved back into record |erritory Tuesday, propelled up- ard by a rally in the dollar and f reasury bonds. The Dow Jones average of 30 industrials reached another re cord close, gaining 25.35 to 2,722.42. It was the 55th record igh for the closely-watched ba- ometer since the beginning of jhe year, when the average stood |t 1,895.95. The dollar, boosted by heavy buying by central banks trying to item its decline, ended a string of |osing sessions, and analysts said he stock market, which has fallen h some recent sessions because of he dollar’s weakness, responded to the currency’s turnaround. Investors have been concerned bout the dollar’s drop because a lower dollar carries the possiblity I of higher interest rates and con- equently, an increase in cor- orate expenses. The market also got a “buy” ignal from a jump in bond rices, which were buoyed by the ollar’s strength. mg the incidents “hurtful to the school district, the children and the taxpayers.” He said tracers were being put on school telephone lines. Arcadia’s Memorial Elementary School has been the subject of pro test rallies and parents’ calls for a student boycott since a federal judge ruled that the Ray brothers — Ricky, 10, Robert, 9, and Randy 8 — have the right to attend classes with other children. Many parents fear their children could be exposed to acquired im mune deficiency syndrome by the brothers. Physicians maintain the vi rus that causes AIDS cannot be passed on through casual school contact; the brothers have no symp toms of AIDS. On Tuesday, 380 children showed up for class and more than 300 stayed home. On Monday’s opening day, 337 students showed up. The first bomb-threat call was re ceived at 8:03 a.m., just as the Ray boys arrived. As on the first day, po lice were guarding the grounds. Some parents who had taken their children to school decided to take them back home after the first threatening call, said Principal Don ald Knoche. DeSoto school officials barred the brothers, all hemophiliacs, from class last fall after they tested posi tive for antibodies to the AIDS virus. Bull market raises investment gains for pension funds WASHINGTON (AP) — The ris ing stock market has been a boon to state and local government retire ment programs, helping make in vestment earnings their major source of income, according to a government analysis released Tues day. The Census Bureau reported in vestment earnings became the source of the majority of the money coming into state and local govern ment retirement systems last year. “The stock market is up,” said Henry Wulf of the finance branch of the Census Bureau’s governments division. “Everybody is helped by that if you have investments. That has to be a part of the answer.” Vic Miller of the National Confer ence of Public Employee Retirement Systems said, “It’s been a favorable market. The fact that we fund public pension funds — state and local gov ernment funds — and put the money away in securities,” has al lowed the improving market condi tions to boost income to the plans. The census study said earnings on investments made up 55.5 percent of the money flowing into state and local government retirement plans last year. That meant that of $88.1 billion in receipts in fiscal 1986, some $48.9 billion came from invest ments. That share edged up from 48.6 percent in fiscal 1985 and was well ahead of the 37.1 percent that in vestment earnings contributed to state and local government retire ment plans in 1981. In 1971, invest ment earnings contributed about one-quarter of the money received by retirement plans, the agency re ported. By comparison, employee contri butions last year amounted to $10.6 billion, or about 12 percent of rec eipts. That was down from 13.2 per cent the year earlier, 16.8 percent in 1981 and 28 percent in 1971. 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