SIGOURNEY WEAVER She left everything she knew and entered a world few have ever seen. She risked her life to save a wondrous creature from the cruelty of man, and went further than anyone ever dared. Some say she went too far. Gorillas IN THE MIST The Adventure of Dian Fossey WARNER BROS. *nd UNIVERSAL PICTURES msiMAGUBER/PETERS hud^on ' NA5S0CIA iI?S ARNOLD GUMCHER SIGOURNEYWEAVER “GORILLAS LN THE MISTteh adventure of man fossey BRYAN BROW'N JULIEHARR1S t0 '™ STUART BAIRD, A.C.E pi %Tmc™5]0RN GRAYSMARK ng&SEW? JOHN SEALE, A.C.S. A rM RICK BAKER co-nwouctis ROBERT NIXON and JUDY KESSLER «MAURICE JARRE MilPETERGUBER and JON PETERS the^khRuy DIAN FOSSEY aAkPu HAROLD IP. HAYES STO R ANNA HAMILTON PHELAN and TAB MURPHY !C *“ NPt ->r ANNA HAMILTON PHELAN .ARNOLD GL1MCHER and TEREN’CE CLEGG di * ect iy MICHAEL APTED GD ^^* READ THE HOUGHTON M1FFUN BOOK Pti -131 wuiBm jTnonstr cautwkb kc& «— mm tm i» rua i ■ hm^uTI [ socNimtAa on mca recoups, cassettes and cd. I • HMfl WAKNeABAOS MC AMO KANfVCRSM CfTY STUDIOS. INC NOW PLAYING IN SELECT AREAS. COMING SEPTEMBER 30th TO A THEATRE NEAR YOU. The Texas A&M Micro Computer T»Ir ’855 Tuesday Wednesday Sept 27 Sept 28 9:00 AM - 6:00 PM Rooms 212 - 231 Memorial Student Center — ^ Booths and Demonstrations by the following Vendors: ABE Systems Addison-Wesley Publishing Apple Computer AT&T Information Systems AutoDesk Cal-Abco CE Software Claris Software Computer Access Computer Resources International ComputerLand of Brazos Valley Computers Etc CTWP Dell Computer Corporation Dominion Computers E&L Computers Everex Systems Harley Courseware, Inc Hewlett-Packard IBM Corporation Intuitive Designs LCM Graphics Mega Computer Microsoft Corporation Osbome/McGraw-Hill Radio Shack Tom Padgitt, Inc VerCom System WordPerfect Corporation XML Corporation Zenith Data Systems Special Product Demonstrations by Apple Computer, Autodesk, Claris Software, Miniscribe, Packard Bell, and others. T T Enter for a special drawing to win an Apple Macintosh SE, one of two IBM PS/2 Model 25's, and other items. M icroComputerCenter Comf niter Sales and Supplies In the Memorial Student Center At the entrance to the Texas A&M Bookstore Monday - Friday 7:45 AM - 6:00 PM Saturday 9:00 AM - 5:00 PM (409) 845-4081 Page 8/The Battalion/Wednesday, September 28, 1988 Health officials declare no danger in Love Canal At first, residents were angry and frustrated at not being able under stand Axelrod’s technical presenta tion. But the mood lightened as it became clear that most residents were getting good news. Axelrod recommended, however, that some blocks were still unsafe, affecting about 10 families. The go-ahead for resettlement will add to a revitalization under way in the area. Love Canal, an abandoned water way project, was used by the Hooker Chemical Co. to dispose of thou sands of pounds of chemical wastes in the 1940s. The company made herbicides and pesticides. In the 1950s, the canal andiii contents were covered over anil homes and an elementary school built. It wasn’t until the early IW that people began to notice fool smells in their basements and oil puddles in their yards. I hey also began to notice highei (ban-usual incidences of miscar riages, birth defects, cancer, leute mia, neurological disease, allergies epilepsy and suicide. In all, 728 homes in a 50-blod area were evacuated and the d ementary school and 228 house! torn down. Radiation device sounds ‘too late’ NIAGARA FALLS, N.Y. (AP) — State, health officials declared Tues day that it is safe for hundreds of former residents to return to Love Canal, the neighborhood that be came world famous for chemical contamination. State Health Commissioner Dr. David Axelrod said most areas of Love Canal contain no more chemi cals than other neighborhoods in the industrial city. The long-awaited finding was hailed by Love Canal residents who feared that the neighborhood would not be resettled but would be left va cant as a symbol of environmental disaster. “We’ve been waiting for this for 10 years,” Nunzio LoVerdi, who lived in a housing project in Love Canal said. “I’ll be the first to move back.” As part of the state ruling, a task force of local officials will create a plan to resettle the community and assist homeowners in renovating their homes, many of which have fallen into disrepair. Hundreds of families had been awaiting the decision to determine whether they can return to the homes they left 10 years ago when President Jimmy Carter declared the area a national disaster. As many as 80 other families were hoping the study would confirm their decision to stay in their homes near the for mer chemical dumpsite. Niagara Falls Mayor Michael O’Laughlin said the decision will be good for the city. “It won’t mean a landslide of peo ple moving back,” O’Laughlin said. “But it will mean the city will begin to put the nightmare behind it.” Axelrod met with some 200 resi dents of the area Tuesday night to announce his findings. Phillips’ plan to relocate affects 125 BARTLESVILLE, Okla. (AP) — Phillips Petroleum Co. is relocating part of its operations from its Denver office to Texas in a consol idation that will affect about 125 em ployees, spokesman Dan Harrison said Tuesday. Harrison said the regional explo ration and production office and the partnership,operations now based in Denver will be merged with com pany offices in Houston and Borger, Texas. He described the consolidation as part of the ongoing effort to im prove profitability during this pe riod of low (crude oil) prices. The Denver office, headquarters for Phillips’ operations in the north western United States, has about 240 employees, Harrison said. Approximately 210 of those em ployees are in exploration and pro duction, he said. Of the 125 Phillips employees in Denver affected by the streamlining move, Harrison said a large portion of those people are going to be of fered jobs in the other areas where Phillips operates. About 80 of the Phillips employ ees affected are professionals, he said. “We think the bulk of those pro fessional people will be offered posi tions,” Harrison said. He said jobs would he available in Houston, Borger and elsewhere as a result of the consolidation. Those employees not offered po sitions will be given enhanced sever ance packages, Harrison said. Regional exploration employees and support staff will remain in Denver, he said. “We think that these reductions are going to be completed by the end of the year,” Harrison said. CHICAGO (AP) — A Nevada company selling a home radiation detector like a smoke detector ad mits it won’t go off until five times the standard set by the government, and safety officials question other company claims. “Over a hundred nuclear power plants are a prime source of peril for some 30 million households situated nearby,” Jack Little, president of Unique Products Inc. of Reno, said. In a mishap, he said, people should get out as soon as possible. “We’re not merchants of fear,” Little said. “On the contrary, we want people to understand that a nuclear mishap is not like exploding a nuclear bomb. People can protect themselves,” he said. The EarlyWarning Radiation De tector sounds an alarm at about five times the minimum government standard for exposure of nuclear plant workers. Little said such stan dards are a matter of scientific con troversy. A six-page manual advises that when an alarm sounds, people should stay calm, gather essentials, lock their homes and head away from the radiation source without speeding. Every few miles, they should check the detector. “When it no longer sounds, then you know you have reached safety,” the man ual says. If the alarm sounds at a higher WASHINGTON (AP) — Abu Ni- dal, after lying low in 1987, appears to be resuming his terrorist cam paign with support from Libya, the top U.S. counterterrorism official said Tuesday. L. Paul Bremer, ambassador-at- large for counterterrorism, also told reporters that the number of terror ist incidents appears to be headed for a record level of 1,000 this year, although the number of Americans killed in such attacks has fallen. “Any effort to make an assess ment of where we are in terrorism leads you to the inevitable good news and bad news,” he said. “The bad news is that terrorism is certainly continuing. According to the figures that we keep, . . . 1987 was the worst year in history. We had 832 recorded incidents in inter setting than the minimum, you need to change directions, it says. Nuclear Regulatory Commission spokesman Jan Strasma said more than a sound-and-light alarm would he needed to decide how to handlea radiation emergency. Strasma said evacuation is not al ways the answer, because a building may provide protection. "The an swer to dealing with a nudearacd- dent is to f ollow the emergency plan and the advice of state and local offi cials,” he said. T he consumer could use a radia tion detector because the NRC ac knowledges nearly 3,000 accidents occur every year at U.S. power plants, Little said. Strasma said that number refers to situations that include minor pro cedural infractions, and called Little’s wording a vast overstate ment. Nonetheless, NRC spokesman Russ Marahito said he could foresee no agency action to counteract any statements used in selling the device. “If he feels it’s correct, that’s be tween him and the buyer,” Marabito said. Little had no sales information on the device, which he said was test- marketed in California. He said US. and European distribution beganaf- ter the National Hardware Show here in August. national terrorism” up from 774 in 1986, he said. For the first six months of 1988 “terrorism is up substantially ovet last year, perhaps by as much as a third. So it is possible that we will end this year with as many as 1,009 incidents, maybe more, which would make 1988 the worst year,” he said. The number of Americans killed in terrorist incidents has fallen from 38 in 1986 to 12 in 1987 andthreein the first half of 1988, he said. Most of the increase in terrorism consists of attacks in Pakistan by agents of the Kremlin-backed re gime in Afghanistan, he said. He said he had no evidence that the Afghan government was responsible s for an airplane disaster that claimed the life of Pakistani president Mo hammad Zia ul-Haq and the U.8 ambassador to Pakistan on Aug. 17 Official: Terrorism may hit record level