Page 8 • The Battalion "P 111 B attalion Tuesday • October 11, Endeavours crew spots smoke on Iraq- Kuwait border CAPE CANAVERAL, Fla. (AP) — Endeavour’s astronauts saw smoke ris ing from the Iraq-Kuwait border on Monday as the shuttle soared 127 miles overhead on a radar-mapping mission. The source of the smoke was not imme diately known. Astronaut Thomas Jones, who used to work for the Air Force and CIA, re ported smoke in southern Iraq marshes as well as what appeared to be small, black plumes of smoke rising from the Iraq-Kuwait border. Diane Evans, a project scientist on the ground, said she did not know what might be burning. Smoke usually rises from Kuwait’s oil fields as waste is rou tinely burned off. Hours after U.S. troops landed in Kuwait on Monday to counter an Iraqi buildup along the border, Iraq an nounced it was pulling its forces back. Endeavour is carrying an air-pollu tion monitor and a powerful radar sys tem for mapping the Earth’s surface in detail. The astronauts on the environ mental study mission are also pho tographing the planet. Evans said the Pentagon made no requests for radar images or pho tographs of Iraq and Kuwait. The shut tle’s survey of that area was planned long before the military action there, she said. Besides, the $366 million radar isn’t capable of picking out details like troops and tanks, Evans said. “We don’t have high enough resolu tion required for surveillance,” she said. Endeavour and its crew of six are scheduled to land at 11:37 a.m. Tues day at Kennedy Space Center, al though rain and low clouds were fore cast. NASA could send the shuttle to Edwards Air Force Base in California later in the day. As of Monday, the radar instru ments had collected enough data to fill 67 miles of tape, officials said. The radar was used largely to exam ine volcanoes, forests, deserts, oceans and rivers. B Z I M V X D T 1) G H L '■ : . I P Id 0 P G D I L J K SP® k it mm.. ' Mim It nH CNF 0 N Z SM ilf JillBi 4- < r—* £ dial 8 I 0 I 0 New York doctor offers abortion drug NEW YORK (AP) - Araeri can women barred access to the French abortion pill RU-486stili can end their pregnancies wit! drugs, according to a doctor who gives patients that option. Dr. Richard Hausknecht,s New York gynecologist and abor tion rights advocate, says he’s sidestepping medical custom to make “a political point.” The treatment combining ho readily available drugs, although given without Food and Drug Ad ministration approval, is appar ently legal, The New York Times reported Monday. “Even if RU-486 gets ap proved — and it may not be if the political climate changes- it won’t be available for anoth er two years,” Hausknechttold the Times. The alternative technique has two steps. Patients get an injec tion of methotrexate, a tissue growth inhibitor used to treat cancer, arthritis and psoriasis Four days later they use a vagi nal suppository containing miso prostol, an ulcer medicine that also hastens labor. Dr. Mitchell Creinin, are- searcher who has FDA ap proval to experiment with the same drugs, told The Associat ed Press he was upset Hausknecht had gone public with what he is doing. "[Dr. Hausknecht] is ruffling some feathers because we feel he would be more pro tected if he had institu tional support, and his patients would be pro tected with oversight." — Dr. Eric dcttdjj University of Rochester School of Medicine A L W A Y S COSTS LE s s T HAN 1 -800-C 0 LLE CT. Hello? Want t he low e s t price for a co l l e c t call? Lower than t I i a t o t her number ? T h e n d i at this one. Because THE CODE a l w a y s costs less i than 1-80 0-COLLECT. ¥)ur True Voice. ©1994 AW FOR ALL INTERSTATE CALLS. “People want it yesterday,’ said Creinin of the University of Pittsburgh School of Medicine. “But the first person who gets harmed ... will be the first person to say, ‘You should have done more research.’ And they also want to be the first person in line to sue.” “He is ruffling some feathers because we feel he would be more protected if he had insti tutional support, and his pa tients would be protected with oversight,’’ said Dr. Eric Schaff, of the University of Rochester School of Medicine. Schaff added, “I do believe he has provided a service to women in his practice by mak ing it available. ... He should be applauded for raising peo ple’s consciousness.” Hausknecht’s office said Mon day he would have no immediate comment. He told the Times he gave 126 patients the treatment this year and five required surgi cal follow-up. In Schaff’s study, 23 women have received the treatment since July and none required surgical follow-up. Possible side effects include diarrhea, vomit ing, cramps and bleeding. Schaff said the drugs can be given by doctors in general practice, or even by nurse prac titioners or physicians’ assis tants. The major drawback is that the treatment cannot be performed beyond the eighth week of pregnancy. Hausknecht charges $500 for the drug treatment. In Rochester, said Schaff, it can be done for $125 per person, be cause those patients do not re ceive an expensive ultrasound exam. He said a surgical abor tion costs $325 to $700. Creinin’s study began in Jan uary 1993. Its sixth trial started in June in Wichita, Kan., San Francisco and Pittsburgh. Very early results show the drug combination is effective more than 90 percent of the time. Creinin said his researchers have studied only one-third to half of the 300 patients needed for a strong statistical sample.