state/nation/world Researchers develop better burn treatment By The Associated Press ALBUQUERQUE, N.M. A researcher says a treatment using a combination of synthetic skin and a new anti-bacterial sulfa :.0 solution has proved a major step forward in dealing with severe burns. University of New Mexico Hos pital is the first center in the nation to try the new approach, said the director of the hospital's burn unit, Dr. John Kucan. The combination seems to do a reasonably good job of keeping bacteria out and moisture and heat in, two skin functions which become critical when a large ...amount of the body covering is lost, he said. At least 12,000 of the 80,000 Americans hospitalized for severe burns each year die. But the university's analyses suggest patients with burns over 40 percent or more of their bodies who are treated with the synthetic skin and the sulfa solution have a survival, rate 50 percent above national averages, Kucan said. Kucan says he began using the synthetic skin-sulfa combination in the fall of 1982, and "our results have been absolutely superb." He said the 50 patients who haye received the treatment so far range from a 9-month-old baby to ` r people in their 80s. They suffered burns ranging from 2 percent of the body to as much as 90 percent, he said. The artificial skin, made of pro teins derived from pig hide and cartilage bonded to a nylon and silicone fabric, is used to tempo- .1• 1 Seafood Pittsburgh's Pilot House restaurant lies partially sunken along the Monongahela river. No one was aboard the $1 million floating diner when it sank :t River yesterday afternoon after being punctured by a log on the rain.swollen The restaurant recently reopened part•time following a six-week shutdown Jailed grandmas freed without telling secret By The Associated Press SHERMAN,. Texas Two grandmothers, standing firm about keeping their secret, were freed from jail yesterday after serving five days for contempt of court because they refused to divulge where a friend had hidden an estimated $45,000. Evelyn Hertzog and Doiothy Pauline Lindsay, both 65, were ordered jailed Wednesday because they refused to tell a county judge where Mary Ellen Bader, 55, had hidden the money. Bader's children are seeking control of their mother's estate, contending she is mentally in competent. `I feel my sister has not been justly treated. I'm sorry but they got up against someone that does. what is right. I am not stubborn. I stand for the law of God.' Hertzog, who is a sister of Bader, and Lindsay, a friend, were advised of the consequences of contempt of court, but they still chose to side with the widow and to refuse to tell where the money was stashed. Harold Hertzog said yesterday that his wife and Lindsay "are standing firm in their belief" that they should not tell the location of the Money. rarily close wounds and has been available commercially under the name Biobrane since 1979. , • The solution was developed in the early 1970 s by Winthrop Labo ratories but never submitted to the Food and Drug Administration for approval. However, officials at the University of New Mexico burn center have conducted indepen dent, FDA-sanctioned research with it for more than eight years. "It became a habit to have this stuff here," Kucan said. The synthetic skin can remain in place up to three weeks while the doctor evaluates the progress of healing and what kind of skin graft might be necessary. Covering the wound with a con ventional antibiotic cream causes a dry scab which must be removed before grafting and blocks the wound from view, Kucan said. In addition, the cream causes tremendous pain upon application. "It was almost like burning them again," Kucan said. Using the sulfa solution with the artificial skin causes no pain and the doctor can see through the skin substitute and watch the wound as it heals, he said. Winthrop spokesman Terry Kel ly said the company is examining the university's results, but noted the nature of burns makes it diffi cult to conduct controlled, scientif ic studies of burn prepatations and to measure their effects consis tently. Kucan said about 5 percent of the patients suffer side effects, primarily a rash, but "in no way has this treatment harmed the patient." —Evelyn Hertzog "I feel my sister has not been justly treated," Evelyn Hertzog said when she was released from jail. " If it was just and right, I would do it again. I'm sorry but they got up against someone that does what is right. I am not stubborn. I stand for the law of God." Lindsay said, "I feel great. It's good to get out." U.S. District Judge William Steger in Tyler ordered the release of the women yesterday morning. A lawyer for Bader had challenged the jurisdiction of the county judge who jailed them. The women were released on $5OO personal recognizance bond. An April 27 hearing was set to consider their lawyer's arguments. Until their release, a jail spokesman said, the women, both of nearby Denison, were being held in a standard cell with a couple of beds, a toilet, a shower and a table. County Judge Lloyd Perkins said he had to order the jailing. "I begged them to reconsider what they were doing," he said. "I let them consult with their attorney before I cited them for contempt. I didn't feel I had any other choice." But Stephen Hefner, an attorney for the wom en, disagreed. "That is not the way you handle a court hearing maybe you did in the Spanish Inquiiition but not in the 20th century," said Hefner. Bader's son, Walter, was appointed a tempo rary guardian of his mother's estate in January after he convinced Perkins she was mentally incompetent to manage her own affairs. Bader has been attempting to gather his mother's assets for safekeeping. Bader, of Sherman, says she is not mentally incompetent and is resisting her son in court. She Jackson plans trip to Nicaragua Democratic candidates make final bid for today's primary By EVANS WITT AP Political Writer The Rev. Jesse Jackson said yesterday that he would lead a peace delegation to Nicaragua, as Vice President George Bush accused him and the other Democratic presidential hopefuls of failing to take a strong stand against the "disgusting disease" of anti-Semitism. Jackson, Walter F. Mondale and Gary Hart crisscrossed Pennsylvania making last-minute pleas for votes in today's primary, in which 172 delegates will be at stake. Polls indicated a close race between Hart and Mondale, although the former vice president was expected to come out ahead in the delegate count. Bush gave the Democratic hopefuls a preview of the upcoming general election campaign yes terday by condemning them for not speaking out more fordefully against comments made by one of Jackson's key supporters Louis Farrakhan, a Black Muslim leader. , Mondale responded that the Republican vice president ought to pick up the morning paper because the former vice president said he had strongly condemned Farrakhan's statements. And Hart said he spoke out on the issue last week, and called Bush's speech a continuation of the politics of distraction. Amid that furor, Jackson announced he is going to lead a peace delegation to Nicaragua late this month or early in May, because he said Americans must support the government there against the CIA-financed efforts to overthrow it. "The situation in Central America is deterio rating," Jackson said in Pittsburgh. "We must support the government in Nicaragua. We have no right to mine the harbors there." Guerillas have been mining Nicaragua's har bors. Recent news reports have said the CIA has been supervising the operation. "Mining the harbor'is close to an act of war. It's 'provocative and dangerous," Jackson said. In February, Jackson turned down an invita- has refused to turn over $45,000 in cash she received when her husband died four years ago. "I'm not hiding it. I just say that it belongs to me and he has no right to have guardianship over me," she said Sunday. "I don't honor that." During the Wednesday hearing, Bader refused to tell the judge where the money was. Since she had been declared incompetent, she could not be held in contempt of court. Bader's lawyer, Scott Pelley, said he then decided to put Hertzog and Lindsay on the wit ness stand, a move he called "a stab in the dark." "They indicated they knew where the assets were and refused to tell us," Pelley said. `I begged them to reconsider what they were doing. I let them consult with their attorney before I cited them for contempt. I didn't feel I had any other choice.' —Judge Lloyd Perkins Pelley said Perkins was very patient with the ladies. Bader said she is troubled that her sister and friend were jailed on her behalf. But she said she had no intention of revealing where the money is. "We're standing for what is right," Bader said: "They are trying to take over ownership of my property. We're standing for truth and justice." tion to visit the country, saying the time was not right for such a trip, but promising to go later this year. Also yesterday, the Department of Education told a group Jackson once headed PUSH for Excellence that it must return $700,000 in federal funds. The government said the Chicago based group either misspent the money or failed to adequately document the spending. `The situation in Central America is deteriorating we must support the government in Nicaragua. We have .no right to mine the harbors there. Mining the harbor is close to an act of war. It's provocative and dangerous.' —Presidential hopeful Jesse Jackson In Washington, Bush told a Jewish lobbying group the American Israel Public 'Affairs Committee that all of the Democrats have fallen short in opposing anti-Semitism. Bush said Farrakhan has threatened all Jews and injected a specter of violence into the cam paign when he threateried a reporter. "Anti-Semitism, wherever it appears,_ . is a disgusting disease but particularly when it appears in our country, where its presence de files our most sacred traditions and institutions," Bush said. In late February, Farrakhan said, in an appar ent reference to Jews "If you harm this brother, I warn you in the name of Allah, this will be the last AP Laserpholo Educators cry for higher-quality texts By LEE MITGANG AP Education Writer NEW YORK In 1914, Ginn & Co. published a fourth grade prim er, "The Young and Field Literary Reader." The print was small, the pictures few and selections includ ed classics by Emerson and Victor Hugo. By the 19505, the use of coloi in children's texts was big, the print was bigger and classic readings had virtually disappeared. Young sters got their first exposure to literature through the stilted, in ane language contained in what educators call "basal readers." Look, look! Run, run! Dick, Jane, Sally, Spot and Puff had arrived. Now, after a year of reports decrying the rising tide of medioc rity in U.S. education, the secre tary of education and other leaders say "dumbed-down" chil dren's textbooks are another piece in the puzzle of what went wrong in the American classroom. Textbooks, these critics charge, have become easier and duller. "The nationwide effort to attain reform and renewal of our schools will fall flat and fail if we do not improve Our textbooks," Educa tion Secretary T.H. Bell told a gathering of school administrators in Las Vegas recently. "Basal readers are not part of the solution. They're part of the problem," said professor Tom Cloer, director• of reading at Fur man University's department of education. The calls for education reform this past year led• some state offi cials, most notably in California and Florida, to campaign for tougher texts. Last month, education officials from 22 states met in Florida to try to demand tougher children's texts from publishers. But a mul tistate coalition proposal faltered, an indication of how formidable the task is. William Honig, head of Califor nia's Department of Public In struction and a critic of "dumbed down texts," said reading texts up •to third grade level were effective in teaching basic skills. But from fourth grade on, he said, texts do a poor job of developing reading and thinking skills, mainly because the stories neither plumb the real world nor teach comprehension. "I made this pitch to publishers last November," Honig said, "and they said, 'our editors would love to write that kind of text. But will they sell?' "Well, I told them they're• the only kind of kooks they'll sell in California from now on if we have our way." The Daily Collegian Tuesday, April 10, 1984 one you do harm." More recently, he threatened Washington Post reporter Milton Coleman for reporting that Jack son referred to Jews as "Hymies." In a radio broadcast, Farrakhan said of Coleman, "one day soon we will punish you with death." Jackson said Sunday that he could not "muzzle a surrogate who wants to make a contribution." "As shocking as I find Rev. Jackson's behav ior, I also Cannot understand why Walter Mon dale and Gary Hart have not continued to speak out loudly and clearly against this," Bush said. But Mondale said he had already condemned Farrakhan's statements; and Hart added that any presidential candidate should "disassociate himself in every way possible from anyone threatening physical harm to anyone else." In Pennsylvania, the Democratic candidates emphasized jobs. On a five-city tour of the state, Mondale em phasized his record of fighting for jobs from his support for federal aid to Chrysler to his backing - of a plan to keep the Wheeling-Pitts burgh steel plant open. Hart told longshoremen at .the docks in Phila delphia that protectionist legislation would hurt ports like theirs. "We can't get into a position where we put up barriers against products from other countries," said the 'Colorado senator. And he disputed Mondale's claim that the Chrysler bailout saved thousands of autowork ers' jobs. "The same number of people work at Chrysler today as would have worked at Chrysler if the government hadn't bailed it out," Hart told the dockworkers. "The argument that he (Mondale) makes that he saved people's jobs, in my judgment, is just wrong." In Pittsburgh, Jackson hoisted a sign saying "Reopen the plant. Rebuilt the cities. Labor for Jackson" and walked a picket line with several hundred striking shipbuilders. Earlier, he said his "rainbow coalition" is the key to saving jobs. "Seventy-five to 85 percent of what happens in the classroom is driven by a textbook," said Flor ida state Sen. Jack Gordon, who organized the aborted multistate coalition effort. "So here we are being held up by textbooks." But publishing spokesmen like Don Eklund, vice president of the school division of the Association of American Publishers, rejected the criticism. Eklund said publishers dropped most of the dreariest Dick-and- Jane-type stories in the 19705. The good books are there, he added, if schools really want them. Some publishers have already turned to higher-quality children's literature and more demanding vocabulary. The current best-selling Hough ton Mifflin Reading Series con tains poetry and selections from such children's classics as "Char lotte's Web" by E.B. White. "We have a heavier vocabulary load in our current series than we did in 1970 and 1966," said Richard Gladstone, Houghton Mifflin exec utive vice president and publisher. But critics insist most early readers offer only bland writing and truncated selections that may show children the mechanics of reading, but not the pleasures. President Reagan's National Commission on Excellence in Edu cation charged last year that "a large number of texts have been `written down' by their publishers to ever-lower reading levels in response to perceived market de mands." Said Jean Padilla, New Mexi co's director of instructional material and past president of the National Association of State Text-. book Administrators, "There are some areas where textbooks have improved, like more balanced treatment of women and minori ties. But reading levels have been constantly pushed downward .. Another repeated criticism of publishers is that they are slow to change. "Publishers won't take any chances. They don't want to rock the boat. If enough people want something, give it to them," said P. Kenneth Komoski, executive director of the Educational Prod ucts Information Exchange, a non profit consumer group that eval uates educational materials. "What we say to the schools is, tell us what you want," countered Eklund. It's not always that simple, crit ics say. For one . thing, individual schools and teachers are often remote from textbook selection, especially in the 24 states where state committees choose text: books. state news briefs Waste dumps may be tainting water HARRISBURG (AP) Five more hazardous waste dumps have been discovered at the. Harrisburg International Airport, state and federal officials announced yesterday. The discovery is in addition to one landfill found last year underneath an airport runway. The U.S. Air Force dumped the material at the former.Olmstead Air Force Base before the base was turned over to the state in 1967, said Nicholas Deßenedietis, secretary of the state Department of Environmental Resources. According to DER, the deposited material ranged from solvents, oils, paint, sludges and degreasers to airplane parts, lumber and Paper. The dumps may be responsible for the contamination of seven water wells that' have been shut down since last year, said DER spokesman Bruce Dallas. Police charge passenger with rape PITTSBURGH (AP) A Pittsburgh man got more than he bargained for when two policemen agreed to give a man a ride, then arrested him based on a rape report they heard on their police radio during the trip. Ernest Howard, 28, of Pittsburgh's Homewood section was jailed in lieu of $20,000 bond after being charged with . rape, indecent assault and involuntary deviate sexual intercourse, police said. A woman reported around 4 a.m. Saturday that she had been raped in bed While staying overnight at a friend's Southside residence. A short time later, Howard entered a downtown police station and asked if anyone could give him a ride to Hazelwood, police said. Officers Thomas Pobicki and John Mykytiuk agreed to help and put Howard in the back of their patrol van. Along the way, the police radio broadcast the rape report and described the suspect, including his T-shirt bearing the word "Hollywood." The officers, remembering Howard's identical T-shirt, deliv ered their passenger to- the city lockup. nation news. briefs Jackson charity asked to return aid WASHINGTON (AP) A social service group once headed by Democratic presidential candidate Rev. Jesse Jackson should return more than $700,000 to the government for federal aid improperly spent by the organization, the Department of Educa tion said yesterday. The funds were used by PUSH for Excellence Inc., a program aimed at encouraging young blacks to stay in school and prepare for job training, The group's parent organization is the Chicago based Operation PUSH founded by Jackson. Jackson once served as chairman of PUSH-Excel and made speeches to promote it but he did not run the organization on a day to-day basis. Charles Hansen, director of the management support division of the Education Department, said most of the $708,431 it wants returned was spent without proper documentation or justification for its use. Four more escape from Tenn. prison FORT PILLOW, Term. (AP) Four inmates dropped into a culvert and escaped from a Fort Pillow State Prison work detail yesterday, less than two months after five prisoners broke out and led police on a chase that left three people dead, authorities said. One of the four was recaptured shortly after the escape at 2:30 p.m., authorities said. The inmates remaining at large were serving sentences for murder or rape. The recaptured inmate was identified as Gregory Smith, sen tenced to 210 years for murder and robbery with a deadly weapon, said John Parish, Gov. Lamar Alexander's press secretary. Parish, who said the four dropped into a culvert to freedom, said authorities did not know if the remaining escapees were armed. Five inmates escaped from a Fort Pillow work detail Feb. 18. world news briefs Lebanese' heads approve agreement BEIRUT, Lebanon (AP) Representatives of Lebanon's war ring factions agreed on a military disengagement plan yesterday that a government spokesman called a first step toward ending the nine-year civil conflict: Sporadic sniper fire continued along Beirut's mid-city "Green Line" last night. Artillery crews had traded fire earlier in the day. President Amin Gemayel was chairman of the higher security political committee that took up the pullback proposals developed over the weekend by a military subcommittee. After the 2 1 / 2 -hour meeting, committee spokesman Mounif Owei dat told reporters the combatants' representatives had agreed on the plan for separating the contending factions, and other commit tees were working to implement it. Oweidat said the comprehensive plan covered the entire Moslem- Christian confrontation line from Beirut's closed harbor to the foot of the Lebanese mountains, and the government's embattled stronghold at Souk el-Gharb in the mountains. He gave no timetable for implementation. Soviet ships depart Gulf of Mexico WASHINGTON (AP) Three Soviet warships conducted exer cises in the Gulf of Mexico last weekend, about 130 miles south of New Orleans, before steaming south toward Mexico, Defense Department officials said yesterday. The three ships included the 17,000-ton helicopter carrier Lenin grad, the largest Soviet warship ever to operate in the Caribbean Sea. The other two were the 8,000-ton destroyer Udaloy and an oiler, said defense officials. The carrier was accompanied by a Cuban Koni-class frigate, the officials said, adding that it was the first time a Cuban warship had conducted joint exercises with the Soviet fleet. A U.S. frigate, the Flatley, shadowed the Soviet ships during the exercises Saturday, the officials said. The Leningrad exercises apparently were unrelated to the large scale Soviet naval exercises last week in the northern Atlantic Ocean. stock repor Trading slowest Volume Shares in past 2 weeks 84,766,380 NEW YORK (AP) The Issues Traded 2,oos stock Market turned in a mixed performance yesterday Up - in the lightest trading in two 699 weeks. Auto and oil stocks were Unchanged among the gainers, while sev- 454 eral blue-chip stocks posted -_-_-- modest declines. Down ------ Analysts said the market 852. shrugged off off the Federal Re serve Board's decision and • NYSE Index increased the discount rate 89.48 - 0.00 charged on its oWn loans to • DOw Jones Industrials financial institutions from 8.5 eP 1,133.90 + 1.68 to 9 percent. WANTED! JUNIORS AND SENIORS for research study on mass communications PAY SS/hr information and registration HUB Basement 9-4:30 Mon. & Tues. 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