[CATION: >und an intoxi- :onscious in the derwood Hall, ported that she iconscious man t to McFadden ding officer de an was imoxi- SPASS: a student re- an had entered wer area of Le- confronted, the le dorm toward e day, a student there have been this semester of no the women’s ? ett Hall. DUCT: police that while g food to a Han om, a student j pea red to be a in his direction, payment for the xotified police of officer arrived at und a black, plas- T: removed a cloth rina from a hali er Building. >end :are ols including daws ivsical therapists, ials said. .ted agreement of tit tagh lawsuit is the» less than two month a Mental Retarte nan Roger Bateina ■ement was simt the RAJ vs. Mile: of the mentally ill, ated cost of hot’, £■ e state is S26.2 mil and S78.4 milta is said. aid money couti i the department is. avoiding the need I meet before the IS m. An emergeno vill be required at that session, they sat ement on care of irded also require.' to begin the prats 1 vith the Accretfe >evelopmental Delio ,s at the Austin, Dell and San Antonios irtment officials said -month period pM xreditation at tlie rim improvementb established for rntii havior treatment ne prevention, repoti ation of client ah® cials said. 'ts of the agreemtu been implemented ication of school-aft local school distnfl pment of individual 1 rgrams for those(fe >ens ilene iel bet failure funds going fot there are $42 ml ig loans, and losst y range from $21 ed profits for the i, which startediod; million, Wallaces^ will actually 1 >n,” he added, es are “almost at th g commission does* 1 icient funds to tliason, executivett labama racing cot> immediately 1, who spoke forth’ e Commission, dt> rs of pari-mutuel f shame gang.” have no shame'' ) raiding the pubi up their dying and ” he said. blicity work in the town’s relig ich makes it a to lized gambling, x the proposed, icing tracks couP, alias, Fort W in Antonio. : >e located in coui" 11 ation elections apf" Wednesday, October 14, 1987/The Battalion/Page 7 World and Nation Haiti police kill presidential hopeful PORT-AU-PRINCE, Haiti (AP) — Police shot and killed on Tuesday a presidential candidate who was de manding in a speech near police headquarters that an alleged political prisoner be released, witnesses said. Plainclothes police walked out of the station, approached Yves Volel of the Christian Democratic Rally, beat him and then shot him, a re porter from television station Tele- Haid said. In a communique from police headquarters, police did not address allegations that they killed Volel. They said he had been armed and that they were looking for “his ac complices.” Police cleared the area of bystand ers and reporters and confiscated the film, cameras and equipment of photographers, witnesses said. In the statement, police said, “Yves Volel presented himself at po lice headquarters with a group of armed men and made a 10-minute speech. Several shots were fired. Yves Volel carried a Colt .45 pistol.” Jean-Claude Bajeux, co-leader of the main opposition group, the Front for Concerted Action, com mented, saying, “That is the whole world turned upside down.” Louis Roy, one of the key drafters of the constitution, said the slaying r pi Id r rity that would make the holding of fair elections in November difficult. Volel is the second presidential candidate to be slain in the past three months. On Aug. 2, Louis Eu gene Atisse was hacked to death by a mob of peasants on the steps of a church in the town of Leogane, 20 miles west of the capital Port-au- Prince. Marines We’relookingforafewgood meti. Captain R. Mahany 846-9036/8891 TOIHiii ISi m SAVE DOLLARS!!! USE RENT BUCKS House bans sea dumping of plastic junk WASHINGTON (AP) — The House moved on Wednesday to prohibit the dumping of plastic junk at sea, a commonplace prac tice that environmentalists say en dangers seacoast tourism as well as marine life. Rep. Gerry E. Studds, D-Mass., the bill’s chief sponsor, said the measure “proposes to enact into law what should be common sense.” The legislation was passed 386- 14. Texas Land Commissioner Garry Mauro, an active supporter of the legislation, called the House vote a big step forward. “It kicks all the pressure on the Senate,” he said. “If the legis lation passed by the House passes the Senate we will have taken a gi gantic step toward solving the beach litter problem.” Rep. James J. Howard, D-N.J., said the plastic pollution problem has reached crisis proportions. Pilot may have sacrificed own life in attempt to save others in crash hue 1904 Texas Ave., Bryan, Texas 409-779-0085 1410 Sycamore, Huntsville, Texas 409-295-6051 2301 S. Texas Ave., College Station, Texas 409-693-1313 1104 South Market St., Brenham, Texas 409-836-0960 5514 South General Bruce, Temple, Texas 617-778-4449 REDEEMABLE AT ANY ONE OF THE STORES $2 CREDIT ON ANY RENTAL OF $5.00 OR MORE OFFUTT AIR FORCE BASE, Neb. (AP) — An Air Force pilot may have sacrificed his own life in an un successful attempt to keep a crippled B-1B bomber aloft long enough to permit two other occupants to es cape, the Omaha World-Herald re ported Tuesday. The Strategic Air Command is in vestigating the possibility that Maj. James T. Acklin stayed aboard the doomed bomber and fought to keep it under control long enough for two men not in ejection seats to bail out, the paper said. Acklin, 37, of Champaign, Ill., was in the right front seat of the B- 1B when the plane sailed into a flock of birds near La Junta, Colo. The two right jet engines failed after in gesting birds, and flames erupted from one of the engines. Three crew members used explo sive-powered ejection seats to es cape. Two other SAC officers aboard — a student pilot and an electronic systems instructor — were unable to bail out and were killed in the crash Sept. 28. A SAC accident investigation board has impounded all of the re cords pertaining to the crash and has not disclosed the information it ob tained in interviews with survivors. The World-Herald quoted a se nior officer at SAC Headquarters as saying there are reports that Acklin stayed with the plane, disdaining the use of his own ejection seat, to keep the aircraft aloft as long as possible. Directors of mojor utility in New Hampshire vote to default on $37 million debt payment CONCORD, N.H. (AP) — Direc tors of Public Service Company of New Hampshire, lead owner of the Seabrook nuclear power plant, voted Tuesday to default on a $37 million debt payment due Thursday. Public Service will become the first major investor-owned utility to default on a bond payment since the Great Depression. The 13-member board voted to suspend scheduled interest pay-' ments on various bonds, the first of which is due Thursday, said spokes man John Cavanagh. Public Service has a 30-day grace period during which it can pay up. Creditors cannot take any action against the company, such as filing for involuntary bankruptcy reorga nization, until Nov. 15 if the com pany has not paid by then, Charles Bayless, the company’s financial vice president, said Tuesday. The suspension was effective Tuesday, Cavanagh said. He would not comment further on the meet ing. 4L Hr TfALL 'Thursday, October 11>, 1987 7:30 pan. 224 9dSC Sponsored by 9dSC 'BCacf^ STzvarencss Committee fz.00 HjiiMcr nmt Office J.C Hr Reagan vows to find a new nominee if Bork is defeated WHIPPANY, NJ. (AP) — A defiant President Reagan declared Tuesday that if Supreme Court nominee Robert H. Bork is defeated in the Sen ate, as expected, he’ll try to find a new nominee “that they’ll object tojust as much.” Earlier in the day, in a speech in Somerset, Reagan accused Bork opponents of “distortions and innuendoes” but dropped harsher wording that had been included in an earlier version of the speech. And he didn’t even mention Bork in the for- .mal remarks he delivered in Whippany-toi the New Jersey Republican State Central Committee. However, after the speech a woman called out, “We want Bork,” and Reagan rose to her words. “You want Bork, too?” Reagan asked. “So do I.” He told the audience that Bork would stay in the fight even though “we know the odds are against him. What’s at issue here is not one man and what happened to him. 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