Pags2 Monday, April 13, 1937 Daily Nobraskan 3V By The Associated Press News Tenaco Inc., files for Ibantaiptcy NEW YORK Oil giant Texaco Inc., fighting an $11 billion judgment in favor of Pennzoil Co., filed Sunday for protection from creditors under federal bankruptcy laws. It is the biggest U.S. industrial company to take the drastic step. The filing under Chapter 11 of the U.S. Bankruptcy Code does not mean Texaco is insolvent and should have little or no effect on its day-to-day operations. But it means Pennzoil will be unable to seize any Texaco assets indefinitely. Analysts interpreted the move by Texaco, the nation's third-largest oil company, as a tactical measure to stall Pennzoil and pressure the rival into a settlement of their two-year-old court battle, in which Pennzoil accused Tex aco of illegally interfering in a planned merger between Pennzoil and Getty Oil Co. "Pennzoil has placed its own greed above any consideration of fundamen tal fairness or the public welfare," James Kinnear, Texaco president and chief executive officer, told a New York news conference announcing the Chap ter 11 filing. "Pennzoil has bludgeoned Texaco with unreasonable demands." Kinnear said Texaco was forced to seek bankruptcy-law protection because the Pennzoil judgment was frightening customers and suppliers, and making it harder for Texaco to arrange credit. Under Chapter 11, a company con tinues operating but is shielded from creditor lawsuits while it works out a way to pay debts. The company's com mon stock likely will continue trading, but Texaco said it would immediately suspend stock dividends. Texaco has been fighting in Texas and federal courts to reverse a 1985 ruling in favor of Pennzoil and to lower an order that it post security equal to the $8.5 billion judgment and interest. "Pennzoil thought we took Getty Oil away from them unfairly. We belive we won Getty fair and square," said Kin near. He called the move "a most diffi cult, painful and wrenching decision . . . however, we had no choice in the matter." Editor Managing Editor Assoc. News Editors Editorial Page Editor Wire Editor Copy Desk Chief Sports Editor Arts & Entertain ment Editor Photo Chief Night News Editors Night News Assistant General Manager Production Manager Advertising Manager Publications Boaid Chairman Jeff Korbelik 472-1766 Gene Gentrup Tammy Kaup Linda Hartmann Lise Olsen James Rogers Scott Thien Joan Rezac Chuck Green Scott Harrah Andrea Hoy Mike Reilley Jeanne Bourne Jody Beem Daniel Shattil Katherine Policky Lesley Larson Harrison Schultz. 474-7660 The Daily Nebiaskan (USPS 144-080) is published by the UNL Publications Board Monday tliiough Fi (day in the fall and spring semesteis ancJ Tuesdays and Fndays in the summei sessions, except dunng vacatiuns. Subsci iption pi ice is S35 toi one yeai. Postmaster Send addiess changes to the Daily Mebi askan. Nebi aska Union 34. 1400 R St.. Lincoln. Neb. 68588-0448. Second-class postage paid at Lincoln. NE. ALL mUHIHL COPYRIGHT 1987 DAILY NEBRASKA Homeless wait for cleanup of deadly chemical spill Jfihslnn 1 hTRAiri diaiu aa t PITTSBURGH Throughout the city's East End, churches stood silent on Palm Sunday and thick stacks of news papers sat unsold in the rain while about 1 6,000 evacuees waited for workers to remove a derailed tanker's deadly chemical cargo. The tanker was among 34 railroad cars that toppled off the tracks when a Conrail freight train en route to Chi cago derailed and plowed into another freight train headed in the opposite direction Saturday afternoon. No serious injuries had been reported by Sunday, although 14 people were treated at hospitals for breathing prob lems immediately after the derailment. People living within 2.6 miles of the accident were advised to leave their homes immediately, but were allowed back six hours later after the leak was plugged. They were told to be out of the area again by noon Sunday, when emer gency crews would attempt to remove the derailed tanker. Shortly after midnight, however, the chemical began seeping again from the tanker and East End residents were awakened by wailing sirens and police bullhorns. By daybreak, about 15,000 people had been evacuated, many by city buses to a downtown convention center where Red Cross and Salvation Army volunteers handed out free coffee and donuts and arranged a Palm Sunday Shultz says he '11 talk to Kremlin on spying HELSINKI, Finland Secretary of State George P. Shultz said en route to Moscow Saturday that he would confront the Soviets about eavesdropping and the "very hostile environment they set up" at the U.S. Embassy. But Shultz also said he was tak ing a well-prepared agenda and "a constructive spirit" and "if the Soviets have the same spirit we should be able to move the ball along in a very positive way." Shultz outlined his plans at a news conference in Shannon, Ire land, while mechanics refueled the two U.S. Air Force jets that carried him and his team from Washington. The secretary of state and his entourage of about 100 aides and security personnel stopped in Hel sinki to rest overnight and then Shultz will meet with Finnish Pres ident Mauno Koivstoand Foreign Minister Paavo Vayrynen. The U.S. delegation will fly to Moscow today. Shultz told reporters the United States is willing to consider a prop osal by Soviet leader Mikhail S. Gorbachev for independent talks on the reduction of short-range nuclear missiles in Europe. But he insisted that the Soviets must recognize a U.S. right to match 130 short-range Soviet SS-12 and SS- 23 missiles or agree to a reduced number. Shultz said if the Soviets did that, negotiations on' short-range missiles could begin in six months. The United States has no missiles in Europe in the 350-to-600-mile (short) range. The Soviet advantage is one of the major obstacles to an agreement to remove medium-range nuclear missiles from Europe. "The president is very upset at what happened, as I am," said Shultz, referring to alleged Soviet eavesdropping at the U.S. Embassy in Moscow. He implied the United States as well as the Soviet Union engage in surveillance, but added, "We must make it clear to them there are lim its in unacceptable activity. So I will talk about this." In an escalating, public exchange, Shultz has accused the Soviets of infiltrating the U.S. Embassy with listening devices, while the Kremlin in turn said American agents had planted microphones in the new Soviet diplomatic complex in Wash ington. Allegations that U.S. Marine guards were lured by Russian women to compromise security measures at the American embassy added to Shultz' woes. Mass. "I want to go back home. But I'm scared to go back," said Antoinette Ricci, 43, who spent the night in a chair with her husband and two children. Throughout the evacuated area, churches were empty on a rainy Palm Sunday morning and stacks of news papers lay unopened in front of new- stands. Normally busy Liberty Avenue was empty except for police cars and firetrucks. Phosphorus oxychloride. a liquid used as ar additive in gasoline and hydrauli v fluid, turns to vapor in the air and can be lethal in heavy concentra tions, said Glenn M. Cannon, the city's public safety director. And now for something completely different... flfc fpomn np 1" rJ,kf & T0P,C li PRESENT f .ft r rRRTifTi'lfif Thursday. April 16 7:30 p.m. Union City Students C 2. 50 with I. D., Nonstudsnti $4.50 Tickets $3.C0, $5.00 st door Tickets avsitebla st: Doth Unions Pickles Dirt Chzzp dams leave ie gaey of life, broken promises, injustice and frustration WASHINGTON George Gillette wept openly in 1948 as he sold the federal government 156,000 acres of prime Missouri River bottom land where Indians had lived in peace and self reliance for a century. "Right now, the future does not look good to us," said Gillette as the Army Corps of Engineers took control of the heart of his reservation in exchange for $12.5 million and promises that have not been kept nearly 40 years later. Gillette, then chairman of the Fort Berthold Indian Tribe Business Council, worried for the future of the Three Affiliated Tribes, whose best farm and cattle land soon was flooded by the Garrison Dam in North Dakota. "The bleak predictions have all too sadly come true," says Rep. George Miller, D-Calif. He and other members of Congress are work ing to right what they see as wrongs done to the Fort Berthold people and to the Standing Rock Sioux in North and South Dakota, who were hurt in the same way by the Oahe Dam. "The Three Affiliated Tribes have never reco vered from the economic and social destruction of their reservation," Miller says. Similarly, the Standing Rock Tribe was wronged and cheated," Miller, chairman of the Interior water and power subcommittee, has teamed with Senate Indian Affairs Chairman Daniel Inouye, D-Hawaii, in an effort to fashion a better deal for the Indians. Their starting point is a 1985 study by a spe cial Interior Department commission. It recounts a familiar story in U.S.-Indian dealings; native Americans intimidated by a big government into giving u? what they didn't want to lose. The commission found that the dams made life worse for the Three Affiliated Tribes Mandan, Eidatsa and Anikara and the Stand ing Rock tribe, which received $5.2 million for 56,000 acres in 1S53. The commission said that fair compensation for the last land and wsy of life is at least $178.5 million for the Three Affiliated Tribes and at least $18.2 million for the Sioux. Fair compensa tion could go as high as $4 1 1.8 million and $343.9 million, respectively, it said. The quality cf life enjoyed by the tribe3 on the river bottomlands has not been replicated in the areas to which they were removed," the panel said. "The dramatic rise in the incidence of stress-related maladies and illnesses follow ing removal of the Indians is circumstantial evi dence that there is a causal relationship between these effects and removal." A commission member, Brent Blackwelder, said the government's actions a generation ago were "manifestly unjust" and "badgered (the Indians) into an arrangement in which they were not properly compensated." "The story . . reveals an array of injustices which to this day have gone largely unad dresed," said Blackwelder, vice president of the Environmental Policy Institute. The tribes "had to give up their best land for these gigantic dams and were transformed as a consequence from a relatively self-sufficient group of people into people facing depressed economic conditions where there is little oppor tunity and where diseases such as alcoholism and diabetes rank among the leading causes of death," he said. The commission recommended that the govern ment keep its earlier promises of low-cost power and irrigation for the tribes, hunting, fishing and recreation rights at the two reservoirs and replacement of facilities like roads and hospi tals flooded by the dams. At a recent joint hearing by the Miller and Inouye panels, Ross Swimmer, assistant Interior secretary for Indian affairs, said the recommen dations should be considered in conjunction with Garrison Diversion, the Bureau cf Reclama tion's largely incomplete water-delivery project. Swimmer's prepared testimony, however, did not mention that if the Reagan administration gets its way, further work en the project will be shelved at least until the early lCOCs. He said the Bureau of Indian Affairs would be happy to work with the tribes in carrying out another recommendation: that the Indians be given any excess Corps of Engineers land around the reservoirs.