The Battalion. (College Station, Tex.) 1893-current, May 06, 1988, Image 13

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    Friday, May 6, 1988/The Battalion/Page 13
Jewish man kills 1, injures 1
ing to deter Palestinians
se
■TAPPUAH, Occupied West Bank
(AP) — A Jewish settler trying to
drive Palestinian shepherds away
shot one of them to death Thursday
and seriously wounded another,
according to Israel radio and Arab
reports.
Hfhe radio said the trouble began
vator) wasinWen an Israeli woman saw several
ming'Pleast Ar; > shepherds in a field between
^■rinus Aiya, a West Bank village
tn unidentifipj? , ailes northeast of Jerusalem, and
in an elevai: the [ewish settlement of Shillo.
tirty-seven spjjpe called other settlers, the Ar-
nd three firfi^ltlj responded with stones and “one
burns or s: pf he settlers opened fire, appar-
i one was ent on the stone-throwers, killing
d. and wounding another,” the ra-
declared un'dil^aid.
fter it was reporter for the Al Quds news-
were not paper in Arab east Jerusalem said
e 37th flwiet'ish settlers tried to drive Arabs
out of fields in which they were
er had no jv4 r ^’ n 8 near Shillo. He said the
it was built
les required!
said. Workenl
million systt;
tarily deddecj
dead man, Jude Abdallah Awad, 28,
was shot in the head and Rizik Abu
Naim, 29, was wounded in the right
eye when he tried to help Awad.
Earlier Thursday, Israeli troops
shouting orders through mega
phones told all West Bank mer
chants to close for three days or their
shop doors would be welded shut.
The army ordered the ban on
commerce to punish Arabs in the
West Bank for a one-day strike
Wednesday called by Palestine Lib
eration Organization.
Many strikes have swept the West
Bank and Gaza Strip since Dec. 8,
when a rebellion against Israeli occu
pation began among their 1.5 mil
lion Palestinian residents. Israel cap
tured the territories from Jordan
and Egypt in the 1967 Middle East
war.
Near Beita village, where a teen
age Jewish settler was slain last
month, hundreds of Jewish settlers
trudged along a mountain path wav
ing Israeli flags. They chanted “Ex
pel the Arabs!”
In the Gaza Strip, troops fired
tear gas at 150 youths who set tires
ablaze and raised the Palestinian flag
to protest the army’s closing of Arab
schools. The youths chanted “PLO
yes, Israel no!” Soldiers shot and
lightly wounded a 15-year-old Arab
in the Gaza town of Khan Yunis, Is
rael radio said.
Hundreds of Arabs have been
wounded in the five months of vio
lence and at least 184 have been
killed. Two Israelis were slain — the
teen-ager, Tirza Porat, and a soldier.
Police in Jerusalem detained Elias
M. Zananiri, managing editor of the
Palestine Press Service and the
weekly Al Awdah’s Arabic-language
edition.
T.V. for
sporting
events.
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11-10 M-Thur
11- 12 Fri-Sat
12- 10 Sunday
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$8 minimum delivery 1037 Texas Ave., College Station
@ the East Gate 696-0032
Cassie Overley. D D S Dan Lawson. DOS
1 It
rices drop
I s investors
wait figures
VIEW YORK (AP) — Prices fell
: second straight session in the
ck market Thursday as traders
rily awaited the latest monthly
>ort on employment.
The Dow Jones average of 30
ON (AP)-h industrials, down 22.05 on
1 hursday laiWednesday, fell another 16.08 to
ffice of HsJ 2,920.23.
Vright, D-Tc®The Labor Department is
aged unimpt!| jtheduled to report Friday on the
clue to a ki employment situation for April,
larms, sayHiCjconomists generally expect the
as one of the:’ data to show continuing job gains.
■ But analysts say investors may
ipitol Police 4 well respond negatively to any ev-
a for smoke it? idence of increasing strength in
;ne, but thev fcwie economy, interpreting it as a
her medicaliEWortent of mounting inflationary
Dan Nichols j lressures and an upward influ-
Wright’s seev eiice on interest rates,
fice of the Lg ‘ Wall Streeters reason that the
across the ra Federal Reserve is likely to give
al, was causeif ttle employment figures consider-
oblem, said [J able weight in deciding whether
bia Deputy:! or when to tighten its credit pol-
[ackson. He 4 icy.
ages at JISO,! I Yields on long-term Treasury
Ices will needij Bonds have lately been hovering
on. Hround 9 percent. If they were tea
eldon, R-Pa.,s|Bo much higher, brokers say, they
e to spread would stand to pose a formidable
after it broke ! fempetitive'threat to'stodesi*
p.m. because
supposed tol*
inets throu{s:>
■e missing.
Two teams conquer
summit of Mt. Everest
KATMANDU, Nepal (AP) —
Two teams reached the summit of
Mount Everest from opposite sides
Thursday and broadcast stunning
pictures of azure skies and the
craggy, snow-covered Himalayas ris
ing above the clouds at the top of the
world.
It was the first time two parties
had scaled the world’s highest
mountain simultaneously, and it was
the first live telecast from the sum
mit.
The 10 climbers wept and con
gratulated each other. Some fell to
their knees after wading through
waist-deep snow to the 29,028-foot
peak.
They were from Japan, China and
Nepal, the nations that received the
live broadcast.
“This is the greatest event in the
history of climbing,” Kunga Sherpa,
the leader of the team that climbed
from the Nepal side, said as a cam
era recorded the breathtaking pan
orama.
Images were relayed by satellite
from a small camera attached to the
helmet of Japanese climber Susumu
Nakamura.
“We made it!” the climbers gas
ped, their voices rasping in the thin
air. Most wore goggles and oxygen
masks along with their red, blue and
yellow parkas. Eyebrows were coated
with ice in temperatures of about 30
degrees below zero.
They stretched bright-colored
banners across the summit and
scooped dry, powdery snow into
small bottles. One poured whisky on
the snow to honor mountaineers
who have died trying to conquer Ev
erest, including Hidetaka Mizuko-
shi. He died of a heart attack on a
climb last month.
The teams began their assaults on
Everest last month from base camps
on the south face in Nepal and the
north face in Tibet.
After the rendezvous, in another
first, three climbers who scaled the
south face descended by the north
and three who ascended the north
face went down via the south.
More than 200 people were in
volved in the project, the most ever
for an Everest expedition.
It was timed to mark the 35th an
niversary of the first conquering of
Everest — on May 29, 1953, by Ed
mund Hillary of New Zealand and
Tenzing Norgay, his Sherpa guide.
Nearly 200 climbers have reached
the summit since then, some more
than once.
Hillary now is his country’s am
bassador to India, Nepal and Ban
gladesh. Tenzing, called “Tiger of
the Snows” by other Sherpas, died in
1985.
-H families take puppies for 1 year
..to train as guide dogs for the blind
„
)l aid
■TOPEKA, Kan. (AP) — Four La
brador retriever puppies arrived re
cently in Neosho County, headed for
homes with area families.
KBut these puppies will be in Kan-
t | sal,only a year. Then the dogs will go
|j|0| injo a rigorous training program in
kJIvtl Ohio, where they’ll learn how to
Hide blind people through stores,
into restaurants and across streets,
ions were coil*The dogs are part of an
i 50 ' agreement reached in 1986 by Marta
5 people were Liylander, the county’s agricultural
ally. Htension agent, with Pilot Dogs In-
Bruce Bert cornorated of Columbus, Ohio,
president of Under the agreement, area 4-H
ic, was identic children raise dogs bred by Pilot un
ite officials t til ,1^ dogs are big enough to start
rsday that" training. Most of the nine guide dog
i second work schools in the nation arrange with 4-
d, died as we 9, programs to raise the puppies
ield had pc
nd had diffe
” said comp
looker. Em]
mg said West (
i.“It’s my
umber of per?
:erfield to
ecause he hai
rtment,”
they breed, Laylander said. But
Kansas was always too far away from
any of the schools, until Laylander
persuaded Delta Airlines to fly the
dogs from Columbus to Kansas City
for free.
For the children and families who
take the dogs, “Ids an opportunity
for them to have contact with one of
these dogs that is so superior in tem
perament and intelligence,” Lay
lander said.
For the dogs, it’s part of a nec
essary process to help them get used
to people.
“They have to be raised in a fam
ily environment and socialized to the
world in general,” Laylander said.
To participate in the program,
children must be at least 14 years old
and have two years of dog training
’Rock
explosions
ipmentmalfc
President f-
0DY
Aji' Pizza Rolls
Your Choice
( Pepperoni & Cheese OR Sausage & Cheese
incl pizza sauce
$10*55 per dozen $5*90 Vz dozen
iipiitiMri
Pizza Rolls
Your Choice
pperoni & Cheese OR Sausage & Cheese
incl pizza sauce
$10*55 per dozen $5*90 Vz dozen
$6.99|
1 Large 7 Topping Combo
seven topping: peperoni, beef, sausage, mush
rooms, black olives, greenpepper, and onions.
2 for 1
Small Single Tapping & Cheese
Price Slicers $6.61
additional topping .840 for both pizzas
1 Large Price Slicer i 1 Large Price Slicer
Single Topping & dJC OB S Single Topping & OK
Cheese | Cheese #513
additional topping . 690 additional topping . 690
We will also honor
afl competitors
coupons!
Limited Delivery Area
PIZZA
900 Harvey Rd.
764-6666
Sales Tax not included
Jim and Karen Arents, D D S
experience, usually through a
county 4-H program. They also have
to promise to take care of the dogs
for a year — and then give them up.
“They have to say that yes, they’ll
raise the puppy in the house, take it
to the veterinarian and complete an
obedience course with it,” Laylander
said. “They also have to give it up at
the end of the year, and sometimes
that’s hard.”
But, Laylander said, the children
know the dogs will help blind peo
ple.
“We try to remember what we’re
raising them for,” Laylander said.
Fran Clay’s 18-year-old-daughter,
Jodi, has raised two of the dogs — a
Labrador named Pollyanna and a
boxer named Wiggles.
Conuenlent, Family care...
CarePlus Medical/Dental Offices are
now serving the Brazos Valley area
from two locations. CarePlus Medical
Clinic is open 8 am to 8 pm Monday
through Saturday and 1 pm to 8 pm on
Sunday. W. Paul Roquet, M.D., A.B.F.P
and Stephen Nesbit, D O. are available
to care for you at 1712 Southwest
Parkway in College Station. A full ser
vice, on-site pharmacy adds convenience
to the medical service available.
For your dental needs, CarePlus has
two offices: At 1712 Southwest Parkway,
Cassie Overley, D.D.S., and Dan Lawson,
D.D.S. provide responsive dental atten
tion to College Station residents. Those
living in Bryan Qnay go to the new
CarePlus Dental Office at 1103 East
Villa Maria (adjacent to the A.G. Edwards
Office) and receive the same professional
care from Karen Arents, D.D.S., and
Jim Arents, D.D.S.
$ 29.
00
GRAND OPENING
SPECIAL
Routine Cleaning
X-Ray and Exam
Reg $54 /cash
discount $25
*44.
Comprehensive
Exam Special
M Panorex )^-Ray
Fluoride
Reg $111 /cash
discount $67
CarePfuss^ttf
CarePlus Medical Office
1712 Southwest Parkway/CS
CarePlus Dental Office
1712 Southwest Parkway/CS
CarePlus Dental Office
1103 East Villa Maria/Bryan
Medical/Dental Center
696-0683 696-9578 268-1407
COLD
HARD
CASH!
FOR YOUR USED BOOKS
NOW!
roLouporsro
Northgate Redmond Terrace
(across from the Post Office) (next to Academy)
Two Locations!
Enjoy your summer,
but take note. You
can return to school
this fall with extra
credit toward
your degree.
Complete one or two
freshman or sophomore
academic courses required in
your degree plan. Earn the
credits by enrolling in your
local community/junior
college and transfer them
back here in the Fall.
Make this summer count!
Call for a schedule of summer
classes.
Houston Community College
(713) 868-0742
North Harris County College
(713)443-5410
Wharton County Junior College
Student Development Office
(409)532-4560, Ext 315