191 f 4 I M.'s -hile ?t,at ;reat 'ery- asic arts Tom jays ever i me ds. lain" bout asta rum hots i up Yap. cool tont ious sure this and uner itar- ould ome -too- nses 3 on, that 20m- tows 1991 A i hi -ww..^ ■v-ou tsort BILL, a- World & Nation — Page 6 The Battalion mm Tuesday, July 2,1991 Bush gives Cheney final say in base closings WASHINGTON (AP) — Presi dent Bush said Monday it is "highly unlikely" he'll reject an independent panel's report clos ing 36 military installations. But Bush left open the possi bility he might change the list if Defense Secretary Dick Cheney tells him there are targeted bases that must be kept open for na tional security reasons. "I'm not going to go in there and override some decision on a political ba sis. These are tough calls," Bush said at a news con ference in Kennebunk- port, Maine, the day after the panel re leased its fi- n a 1 list. Cheney, meanwhile, indicated George Bush Shell Oil plans reduction of workforce by 15 percent HOUSTON (AP) — Shell Oil Co., responding to disappoint ing financial results this year, an nounced Monday plans to re duce its U.S. workforce by up to 15 percent. Shell employs about 31,000 people in the United States, meaning as many as 4,650 peo ple could be affected by the re ductions. "Shell's business reviews indi cate the need for workforce re ductions," Shell spokesman H.R. Hutchins said. "Our best estimate today is that reductions could reach 10 to 15 percent overall nationwide. They will be done over a 12- to 18-month pe riod beginning immediately. "It's a response to disappoint ing financial results," Hutchins said. The Houston-based petro chemical company, a wholly owned subsidiary of Royal Dutch Shell Group, said it first will seek to reduce the workforce through voluntary retirements, attrition and cutting down on the use of contract workers. "The first thing is to offer vol untary severance plans to certain employees," Hutchins said. "Once those all are identified, then there still may be some in voluntary layoffs. We also will reduce the use of outside con tractors where practical and hope that natural attrition will also play a factor here." Hutchins said involuntary lay offs are likely. He declined to say what Shell divisions would be most severely affected by the layoffs. The Battalion Classified Ads Phone: 845-0569 / Office. English Annex Help Wanted Visiting Europe this summer/fall? Notes-n-Quotes needs simple research done. Call 846-2255. Spain, Italy, Austria, Greece, Switzerland, and others. Knowl edge of the language helpful. Oran my houM weekly. Suppkeefumithed. References awdsd; $5/tu. 77y4H5. tiwcea phystofogisf of OT and physical therapy assis- Miixbusy rehab center. Call tor appointment 622-1454. firl llme service station attendant wanted. Experienced prgiwrsd, not required. 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A 2/1 tour-plex. W/D, $350,3b/2ba. $425. C.S., shuttle. 693-0561, 764-8051. Announcements SCHOLARSHIPS avalleblefrom private sector (to $20,000/ yr.) Cad 24-hr. message lor detads: 213-964-4166 Ext. 86. Lost & Found REWARD !!! For lost diamond sapphire ring. Lost 6/22/91 in parking lot of Schulman 6 Theatre. Janet 693>7926. Lost gold solid heart anklet. Reward. Dawn 845-4837 before 500 p.m Personals SOFT AS COTTON Talk Live 2.50/min., 10 min/minimum 1-900-454-9995 Live one on one, aduds only. 1-900-884-7644,2.50/min.. 10 min ./minimum. he would lend his support to the independent panel's choices. "It looks to me as though they approved about 90 percent of our recommendations," Cheney told reporters in an impromptu meeting outside the Pentagon. "I want to have the opportunity to sit down and talk at least with the chairman of the commission before I make a final recommen dation to the president, but over all it looks to me like they did good work that I am hopeful we'll be able to support." The Defense Closure and Re alignment Commission, headed by former Rep. James Courter, finished work late Sunday and forwarded its report to Bush. Texas bases on the closing list include Carswell Air Force Base in Fort Worth, Bergstrom Air Force Base in Austin, and Chase Field Naval Air Station in Bee- ville. Asked if he would reject the commission's list. Bush said: "it is highly unlikely, but I will rely heavily on what Secretary Che ney tells me." The president said his major concerns are ensuring the mili tary is properly prepared, and saving money. If Bush rejects the package — he must deal with it as a whole instead of making substitutions — the commission has 30 days to review the president's recom mendations. Whatever happens. Bush must act by July 15. If Bush approves the package, it will be sent to Congress where lawmakers have 45 days to ap prove or reject the entire list. Courter, appearing at a press conference, defended the pan el's work, saying, "data was scrubbed carefully, decisions made carefully." Algerian unrest persists President deploys army to restore order ALGIERS, Algeria (AP) — The army moved on Monday to silence the opposi tion and restore order, occupying the headquarters of the main Muslim funda mentalist party and detaining hundreds of le. e actions came a day after the arrests of the two top leaders of the powerful Is lamic Salvation Front, which is challenging President Chadli Bendjedid's government. Sporadic unrest was reported Monday, ana tanks and soldiers with automatic weapons were deployed in the capital. But there was no widespread violence. During the weekend, at least four peo ple, including a policeman, died in anti- government clashes in the capital and else where. Forty people have died in unrest in Algeria since June 4, when the Muslim protests turned violent. Military authorities said 700 people were arrested Sunday and Monday. Fundamen talist Muslim sources put the figure at 2,500. Officials also closed two mosques that are considered centers of fundamentalist activity. Armed soldiers on Monday guarded the headquarters of the Islamic Salvation Front following the arrests Sunday of its presi dent, Abasssi Madani, and vice president, Ali Belhadj. The two men were accused of "foment ing, organizing, triggering and leading an armed conspiracy against the security of the state," a military communique said. "The attempt at dissension to gain power, for which they are responsible, has cost human lives as well as the destruction of much property, and has not definitively ended," the communique said. It said the men would be put on tnal. Madani and Belhadj called Friday for a "jihad," or Islamic holy war, unless the government lifted the state of emergency. They defied summonses served after their speeches. Premier Sid Ahmed Ghozali said the Is lamic Salvation Front posed "a very se rious threat for safety, stability and na tional unity." The Cabinet, which met with President Bendjedid, called for "calm and confidence." Helmeted riot police units surrounded the Salvation Front's headquarters at mid day Monday, evacuated its personnel and took over the building. Pedestrians were barred from the adjacent sidewalk, bridget Trade growth carries possible dangers WASHINGTON (AP) — The Southwest border can expect a mixed blessing from a U.S.-Mex ico free trade agreement, says a report Monday that warns eco nomic expansion may be accom panied by environmental decay, crumbling social services and rapid growth. The report, a series of studies on the impact of a free trade agreement on the "borderlands" of the Southwest, predicts there will be increased investment in the economically impoverished region that stretches from San Diego to Brownsville. But the increase in trade could also spur urban sprawl, pollut ion and increased demands on already strained water supplies, housing, transportation, schools, health care and social services. The result could be a "situa tion of economic overheating," the report said. "This will act as a constraint on growth, and will dictate a barely acceptable quality of life for the poorest residents in both countries," said one of the aca demic studies, which were com piled by Baylor University for Sen. Lloyd Bentsen, D-Texas. The report said the population expansion in the region could both outstrip the supply of homes and overwhelm already strained social services. "Transborder aquifers are dry ing up, and the use of the Rio Grande is at capacity," one study said. "There is no additional wa ter available — conservation and reclamation are the only an swers. Without water there is no possibility of border growth." The study also notes that out side investment in border com munities could drive up prop erty costs and displace small businesses and low-income households. Small retailers that depend on Mexican shoppers and U.S. banks that depend on Mexican depositors could also be hurt if their products or services can be provided south of the Rio Grande. Judge stops euthanasia Husband of brain-damaged woman has right to keep her on respirator, judge says MINNEAPOLIS (AP) — A judge on Monday turned down doctors who wanted to unplug the respirator of an elderly, severely brain-damaged woman despite the wishes of her husband. "I think she'd be proud of me," Oliver Wanglie said when a judge granted him power to make medical decisions for his wife of 54 years, Helga. Doctors at Hennepin County Medical Center had asked District Judge Patricia Belois to appoint an independent conservator to decide the fate of the 86-year-old woman. They hoped a conservator would permit them to take her off the machine that has helped keep her alive since May 1990, when she fell into a per sistent vegetative state after a respiratory attack. Belois ruled that such decisions are best left to family members when they are competent. "Except for unconvincing testimony from some physicians and health care providers at the Hen nepin County Medical Center, there is no evi dence that Oliver Wanglie is unable to perform the duties and responsibilities of a guardian," the judge wrote. "He is in the best position to investigate and act upon Helga Wanglie's conscientious, religious and moral beliefs." William Miller, an attorney for the county- owned hospital, said there likely will be no ap peal. Doctors at the hospital routinely yield to family wishes about life-support systems, but rarely do families disagree when doctors recommend termi nating care, said Dr. Ronald Cranford, a medical ethicist at the hospital. Doctors sought a conservator in the case be cause they believed Wanglie did not fully under stand his wife's hopeless condition. Cranford said it is morally wrong to use a respirator on a se verely brain-damaged person who has no hope of recovery. "Society will have to look at whether it should support spending $800,000 for the care of some one in a persistent vegetative state when there are 37 million people in this country who are under- or uninsured and without adequate medical care," Cranford said. "Perhaps what you should do if you want maxi mum care in this country is fall into a persistent vegetative state." Wanglie's medical costs have been paid in full under the family's insurance policy. Midwestern states complain about trash WASHINGTON (AP) — Gar bage is creating a stink in Con gress. More and more, Midwestern states are complaining to the House and Senate about trash from New York and New Jersey oing to landfills across state nes. "The prairie is America's bread basket, not its waste bas ket," several heartland lawmak ers wrote their House colleagues recently, urging support for leg islation to let states block inter state dumping. "You don't have to live on the f jrairie to suffer from this prob- em," their letter said. "As long as it is cheap and easy to ship waste to other states, no state will be forced to deal responsibly with the trash it generates." The states with surplus trash do not see it that way. Sen. Bill Bradley, D-N.J., warned that a ban would force his state to reopen environmen tally unsafe landfills. He said New Jersey needed more time to implement a new waste manage ment initiative, including a goal of 60 percent recycling by 1995. Currently, states cannot stop the flow of trash from outside their borders because the courts have ruled it would interfere with interstate commerce. The main defense for most states is to enforce their laws governing proper operation of waste dumps. The Senate approved an inter state trash ban proposal by Sen. Dan Coats, R-Ind., last year on a 68-31 vote, but the measure died in a House-Senate conference committee. Coats is again pushing his leg islation, which would permit states to ban out-of-state trash after they adopt 20-year plans for managing wastes generated within their own boundaries. States attempt to balance late budgets The Associated Press State workers in Maine ral lied outside the capitol Mon day, demanding paychecks and a state budget, after the governor shut down all non- essential services in a fiscal showdown with the Legis lature. At least eight other states entered the new fiscal year without budgets. In Connecti cut, the governor threatened to follow Maine's example. "We want to be paid! We want a budget!" shouted some of the 200 or so idled Maine workers who were held back from the office of Gov. John R. McKernan by two police officers. Deriding the governor, they also chanted, "Stop hiding, Jock" and "Impeach McKer nan." Budget negotiations contin ued in Maine, Connecticut, California, Ohio, Massachu setts, Louisiana, Pennsylva nia, North Carolina and Illi nois. Nevada, New Jersey, Washington state and New York City reached agreement on budgets within minutes of their midnight Sunday dead lines. Late budgets are a tradition in some states, but this has been a particularly difficult year for most. Debates have raged over such tough choices as imposing new taxes, cut ting welfare benefits and lay ing off workers. New York City balanced its $28.7 billion budget only by laying off 10,000 city workers. New Jersey's new $14.7 bil lion state budget could force the layoffs of 2,300 workers. 1 2 L to dal ra- d a iny ion ! in om ard lar- ote tic- ian r a all ha- rith nts Her ans eak ada ase per ing na- se- an ing per tain en- mi- ege also ild- res- ver- mts ean tate ver- Jni- en a • the " he pec- ably ago, end- ;em- re- fem- ;e a er is cus- its ige4 I