S' They’re Here! The 1988 Aggieland Where: The English Annex When: 8:30 a.m.-4:30 p.m. Bring your school I.D. plastic covers available for 50 4 Page 16 The Battalion Thursday, November 3,1988 World/Nation Attorney general implores courl to uphold mandatory drug tests WASHINGTON (AP) — The Su preme Court, confronting drug testing in the American workplace for the first time, was urged by Attorney General Dick Thornburgh and his top courtroom lawyer on Wednesday to uphold manda tory tests for many railroad and Customs Service employees. The importance attached to the pair of cases by the administration was under scored by Thornburgh’s participation, marking the first time that an attorney general appeared before the high court since President Reagan took office. He was joined by Solicitor General Charles Fried. Former Attorney General Edwin Meese, Thornburgh’s immediate prede cessor, observed the arguments from the spectator seats. “This is a case about railway safety,” said Thornburgh, who presented the ad ministration’s position in a dispute over mandatory blood and urine tests for rail road workers after accidents or rules vio lations. He said the case was about the hazards created by the use of drugs and alcohol by people “in charge of trains.” Thornburgh stumbled a few times when the justices asked him about some of the specifics of the testing program. “I’m not going to palm myself off on this court as an expert,” Thornburgh said. He last argued before the high court in 1977 when he headed the Justice Depart ment’s criminal division. The last time an attorney general argued before the justices was in 1980, when Benjamin Civiletti presented the Carter administra tion’s side in a Nazi deportation case. If Thornburgh encountered some problems Wednesday, his opponent in the case appeared to fare even worse. Sharp questions were repeatedly di rected at Lawrence Mann, an attorney for the railway workers who said the drug tests are unconstitutional because they are incapable of proving on-the-job impairment. “Neither the alcohol nor the drug test can demonstrate impairment,” he said. For example, he said, the tests can show residue from a drug that may have been taken 60 days prior to the test. ” Justice Antonin Scalia asked if it weren’t reasonable for the railroad to want to know if someone responsible for train safety has “cocaine traces” in his system. Justice Anthony Kennedy asked Mann: “The public has no interest in knowing about chronic drug use as long as the worker is not using drugs on duty?” Justice Thurgood Marshall scolded Mann for spending too much time attack ing the reliability of urine tests as op posed to blood tests. “You have to win on both tests,' shall said. “Aim at both of them.” Fried, the administration’s topt room lawyer, defended the Custa Service program in which urine tests; required for anyone applying fora motion or transfer to a job involving! enforcement. There is an “urgent and symbolic nificance” in assuring the public tka: agency responsible for preventing smuggling has a drug-free workfoJB Fried said. Benefactor for Marcos to post bail Nation’s productivity on rise despite second quarter drop WASHINGTON (AP) — The nation’s productivity rose by an annual rate of 1.3 percent from July through September, the government said Wednesday, revers ing a second quarter decline when new employment had outpaced increases in goods and services. But analysts cautioned that the long term trend of anemic productivity growth offers little hope for lifting Americans’ standard of living or increasing U.S. competitiveness overseas. Output of goods and services by non farm businesses rose at an annual rate of 2.8 percent in the third quarter, while the number of hours worked increased only 1.5 percent, the Labor Department said. But the over-the-year productivity im provement has been only 0.8 percent, the government said. Revised figures showed that productivity dropped 2.4 percent in the second quarter — much worse than the 1.4 percent decline esti mated previously. Larry Chimerine, chairman of the WEFA Group, a Bala Cynwyd, Pa. con sulting firm, said, “Despite the strong growth of the economy over the past year, there’s still no significant change in a the weak trend in productivity that we’ve seen since 1973. “Productivity growth averaging 1 per cent a year remains this country’s major economic problem,” he said. “Until we get it on a stronger upward trend, we’re not going to see any increase in real wages or in our international compet itiveness.” Unit labor costs rose at an annual rate of 4 percent in the second quarter on hourly wage and benefit increases aver aging 5.4 percent annually. Last year, businesses were able to restrain their la bor cost increases to only 3.1 percent, with a 3.8 percent increase in hourly compensation to workers. Roger Brinner, an economist for Data Resources Inc. of Lexington, Mass., said Americans can expect to see a pat tern in the near future in which produc tivity gains offset only a small portion of recent increases in wages. Manufacturers, which account for one-fourth of the nation’s economic out put, continue to fare much better that businesses generally in both improving their productivity and in keeping a lid on labor costs. NEW YORK (AP) — Imelda Mat- cos’s quest for a benefactor endec Wednesday when tobacco heiressDn ris Duke agreed to put up the $5 rail lion needed by the former first ladyd the Philippines to secure her bail oa racketeering charges. Duke will post more than $5 rail lion in municipal bonds as bail lot Marcos, who is accused along witk her husband, former Philippine pres: dent Ferdinand Marcos, of lootiii| more than $100 million from thee homeland. Lawyers said the bonds would ac tually be worth between $5.3 milliot and $5.4 million depending on mat ket fluctuation, although the exact types of bonds were not revealed. “It was Miss Duke’s idea to help,' her lawyer, Donald Robinson, said after a hearing before U.S. District Judge John Keenan in Manhattan, Marcos, 59, who has been stayitt in an $1,800-a-day suite at the Wal dorf-Astoria Hotel, did not attendtk court session. High style and savings! Embossed leather jackets NOW 199.99 Save 50.00 on three contemporary styles. All crafted of premium quality leather that will keep its beauty for years. Shown, the one-button blazer with embossed design. And the embossed black blazer with self-tie belt. Not shown, the red, fly front embossed bomber jacket with banded bottom. Each, in sizes s-m-1, orig. 250.00, now 199.99 Dillard’s i Ts N SHOP DILLARD S MONDAY THRU SATURDAY 10-9. SUNDAY 12-6: POST OAK MALL. HARVEY ROAD AT HIGHWAY 6 BYPASS. COLLEGE STATION 764-0014. 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