The Battalion. (College Station, Tex.) 1893-current, January 30, 1976, Image 4
ge 4 THE BATTALION FRIDAY, JAN 30, 1976 Sun Theaters 333 University 846-9808 The only movies in town. Special Midnight Shows Friday & Saturday $2.00 per person No one under 17. Escorted Ladies Free ALL SEATS $3. $1 off with this ad. Hearst trial drags d Speedy selection of jury urged Associated Press SAN FRANCISCO — The judge and attorneys in Patricia Hearst’s trial for bank robbery planned to look today for ways to speed up the selection of a jury. Five more potential jurors were chosen Thursday, bringing the total to nine, but 27 more are needed to complete the panel of 36 that U.S. District Court Judge Oliver J. Carter wants before attorneys begin exercis ing peremptory challenges. F. Lee Bailey, the chief defense counsel, told reporters each of the persons excused from jury duty had been instructed by Carter not to talk with the media until after the panel is sequestered and the trial has begun. Earlier in the day, Bailey angrily criticized newspaper accounts of a hallway interview with one excused juror. “They can’t speak to you on the way out,” he said. “They proba bly will be held in contempt if they do it again and the newsmen, too.” U.S. Atty. James L. Browning Jr. said, meanwhile, that he and Bailey would meet with Carter before to day’s session “to see if there is any way of expediting the process.” To day’s session behind closed doors was scheduled to begin a half-hour earlier than the first three days. Jury selection, which began Tues day, apparently has been slowed by intensive individual questioning of prospective jurors. “We will study the possibility of consolidating and eliminating some areas,’’ Browning told reporters who have camped in the corridor outside the courtroom since jury selection was made secret Wednesday. Browning and Bailey both pre dicted a jury would not be em paneled before next week. Bailey’s partner, Albert Johnson, denied the defense was attempting to muzzle the press but said the judge had ad vised prospective jurors that if they were “harassed by members of the press or anyone else he would with it summarily.” As jurors are excused now, taken out of the building i Algerian forces retreat Morocco advances in Sahara ★ drive Associated Press RABAT, Morocco — Morocco today claimed victory in three days of fighting in the Spanish Sahara and said its forces captured 101 Algerian troops and pro-Algerian nationalists. Algeria said its forces withdrew “in good order and made no mention of any losses. A Moroccan communique said the Amghala region 175 miles southwest of the Algerian frontier had been “cleansed of all rebel elements of the Polisario Front, the indepen dence movement in the Spanish Sahara which the Algerian govern ment supports. The fightingended early Thursday after “several dozen” guerrillas were killed, the Moroccans said. No other casualty figures were given by either side, but the Moroccans claimed they captured “important quantitie s’’ of heavy equipment, including ar tillery mortars and antiaircraft mis siles. Foreign observers were barred from the remote area on the eastern side of the desert territory, and the official Moroccan and Algerian re ports gave no indication of the size of the forces involved. Algeria claimed its troops were at tacked while convoying food and medicine to refugees from Moroccan rule; military sources in Paris said tanks and artillery were used, and there was “heavy” fighting. The offi cial Algerian news agency said Alge rian forces withdrew “after they ad mirably carried out their mission.” Spain is turning over the Spanish Sahara to neighboring Morocco and Mauritania on Feb. 28 despite Alge rian opposition. The Algerians, who have a 1-mile frontier with the northeast corner of the territory, want an independent government run by the Polisario Front so that they can build a railroad to haul Algerian iron ore to the Atlantic coast. Morrocco, already the world’s largest exporter of phosphates, wants the rich phosphates in the northern part of the territoiy. Mauritania. Other Arab countries rushed en voys to Algiers and Rabat in an at tempt to prevent escalation of the conflict between radical, socialist Algeria and conservative, monarchist Morocco, who fought a three-week border war in 1963. But Algerian Foreign Minister Abdelaziz Bouteflika, in a message to U.N. Secretary-General Kurt Wal dheim, said in effect that Algeria would continue to support the Polisario guerrillas. Demanding that “troops occupying the Sahara” leave at once, he said his government “would spare no effort to contribute to all action likely to eliminate the cause of tension while upholding the freedom of peoples.” private elevator and do not pasit porters. B * Miss Hearst, 21, was not seecB reporters all day Thursday, m e Johnson said she was “very attent| ver to the proceedings. She asks Ml j questions from time to time. Bp () Her father, San Francisco EijW iner president Randolph Hearst,iML, the only member of the familyjjL^ sent. ' Jra. Garter was spending an averMy a 30 minutes to question eachj« nera j then allowing opposing attorneyK st ji ask questions. One man, hour was excused in less than five min L Thursday. |BS e Bailey said the judge was aili|g' es I tn#» mi it i\a/#=» waiifprl nimh^H all the questions we wanted liinii^^ The defense had asked Carter j|| aa fore the trial began to questionpB > spective jurors on how much t!®^ had heard about Miss Hearst gJBL- she was kidnaped by the Sympior«*y er Liberation Army in February lsB se( Attorneys for the newspJm, ai heiress maintain she participated Jf e , of fear for her life. Ford out-buttons Reagan WANT AD RATES l()c per word Minimum charge—$1.00 Classified Display $1.65 per column inch each insertion ALL classified ads must be pre-paid. DEADLINE / 3 p.m. day before publication BATTALION CLASSIFIED FOR RENT HELP WANTED OFFICIAL NOTICE NOTICI . TO TI NAS AixM IM\ EKSITY SirDENTS n tl u* past, et* rta in mint niati on has he on made | imhlic In V\; LS A&M l niv orsitx as a ‘ .or\ ice to students , fatnil it-s ud other into ro‘ and jin lixidi nals. ml ortho "Fa ini K Edit, oatioi »al Bij'hts and IViM iov Ac l :or 971 i. till' follow m« di, ector > Mjpfvn Iron 4iia> Be ma do >u!)l lie unless tlx • stndo i>i <i. sil.N will,old all or a 11X )Olt ion of it >tll( louts nan le. addin ss, telephone listinjt. . ditto a ml >1.10 v of Birth, in ajor lit Id ol Study, p; irtifipatio it> iii oHi- •iall v rocoI'm/ ■ed actix i ties ; aid sport s. dates of atIt ‘11- lane •o. decree.« < ai it) awat ds i t- ’Cei \ o( 1. a. ad tin- mo .st root »nt >rt*\ ions odno ationat at'ency or institi ution atto •ndod In lu- : student. \»> student w ish ini' to ’ ivitho .Id an\ or all oltltis inforn la- ion should fill on t. in pe i son. the appropriate lor in, a\ i lil- to urailnak- s llndont s at t IteCradu ato Colloj'e and to nul< •rmaduato ■ stl adonis .it th< :■ Keqistr. ir s ()llice . no lat lum 5:(X) p.m I nosdax. l- t: Itrnarx 3. 1976. 1 bedrom, furnished house in country 22 miles from campus. Place for horse, $100 month plus utilities, 272-8493. 66t2 Horse pasture and stalls, 846-7015. Furnished apartment. Good for 2 hov. 4 paid. 846-5132. S&0. Vz itilities 60tS FOR SALE Eclwi Vim ions and He< •\&cM l ni\t SPECIAL NOTICE ATTENTION MAY GRADUATES! Orders for Graduation Announcements will be taken beginning February 9 thru February' 27, at the Student Finance Center,. Room 217, Memorial Student Center, Monday thru Friday, from 8:00 to 4:00. Service For All Chrysler Corp. Cars Body Work — Painting HALSELL MOTOR COMPANY, INC. Dodge Sales and Service Since 1922 1111 Texas Ave. S23-S111 MEN AND/OR WOMEN: DOES YOUR JOB PAY $20,000 yearly? Start part time $300-500 a month. When well-trained begin full time earning $20,000 yearly. Call 846-9414 after 5:30 p.m. 66t4 SNOW SKIER SPECIAL Kneissl Red Star Racer Skis, 195 cm. w/hindings, $150. Volkl Zebra Skis, 190 cm. w/bindings, $100. Lange Competi tion Ski Boots, men’s 8M, $125. 823-3096 6616 ATTENTION SHUTTERBUGS: Century 2 ■/. \ 3 '/< Graflex with case and all equipment. Exacta II with portrait lens and extension tubes. Revere 444 Man ual projector and Federal enlarger. Collectors item, make oiler. Phone S ITS 6660. 1972 Toyota, 25,000 , 3795. iles, excellent condition. Call 693- 67t4 1968 TR-650 Triumph motorcycle. 693-0162 after 6:00, Jerry. 6714 No use driving and hunting — just see Cowan’s White Auto Store, North Gate. We have it: auto parts, home appliances, bikes and repair, home needs and lawn mowers. 1970 Dodge Coronet, blue, white vinyl, 846-4571. 64t4 HP-65 with hard case. Security Cradle, Math Pack I 2 extra batteries, $650. 845-2873. . and 6414 Sears gas stove, $150, 846-7174. ”73 Triumph GT-6, extra clean, sider trade. 845-5028, 596-6331. $3000 firm or will con- 6415 Amarillo Texas A&M Club hits scholarships available and requests interested Sophomore and Junior students from Apiarillo-Canyon area inquire: c/o James' Wilson ”65, President, 501 W. 9th St., Amarillo, TX. 64t4 ROOMMATE WANTED FOR SALE OR RENT BELAIR Mobile Home Park 5 minutes from campus Swimming pool, TV cable, all city- utilities, large lots. 822-2326 or 822-2421 Get the Best for Less 394tfn Need one or two men to take over my room of two bed, two bath apartment. Call Dennis, 823-5389. Restaffing, taking applications now. Waitresses, hostesses, bus boys and dishwashers - all shifts available - part time and full time. Apply in person between 2 & 5 p.m. a drvrswn dt bUBmaoonal Industries Inc 103 N. College Avenue No phone calls please MR. GATH’S is looking for additional versatile enter tainers: guitar, banjo, pianist, singers, duos and groups. We are also offering a cash award plus contract for the forma tion of a “Mr. G. Ragtime Band. ” If you have talent and would like to audition, call 846-4809 for appointment. Now accepting applications for waitresses at the Bryan Pizza Hut, 2610 Texas Avenue. Apply in person. Moroccan troops have taken over the main towns of the sparsely popu lated, Colorado-size territory and sizable stretches of the desert hinter land, but the Polisario guerrillas con trol a sector in the northeast near the borders with Morocco, Algeria and Associated Press WASHINGTON — If button sales are a reliable indicator. President Ford may be nosing out Ronald Re agan for support among young Re publicans meeting here. Frank Enten is selling Ford and Reagan buttons to some of the 1,600 young Republicans from around the United States meeting here for a four-day conference in a local hotel. And he says the Ford buttons are selling better than the Reagan but tons. Enten, an insurance broker in the Washington area, has shiked out part of the hotel lobby for his hobby- sideline of collecting and selling political souvenirs, some of them SENIORS—GRAD STUDENTS ♦ FORESTRY *ANIMAL SCIENCE ♦ AGRONOMY * AG ECONOMICS Peace Corps representatives will be on Campus Tuesday, February 3rd, to talk with you about opportunities overseas with the Peace Corps, starting May and June. Sign up now for an interview and Packet at these locations: pick up your Interview AG ECONOMICS: 101 Ag. Building Ms. Gaiser FORESTRY: 120 Forestry Building Ms. LeNoir ANIMAL SCIENCE: 213 Animal Industries Bldg. Ms. Williams AGRONOMY: 102A Agronomy Building Dr. Milford «psu ! C/uH W RN needed for 3-11 and 11-7 shifts. Part time or full time. Call or come to Grimes Memorial Hospital, Navasota, Tx. Ask for Mrs. Winklemann, 825-6585 291 In 2 female roommates needed. Briarwood, rent $65, Jan. paid. Brenda, 693-9403. 62t6 HELP WANTED FOR RENT 12 bedroom apartment. $145, furnished; $125 unfurnished. Yon pay utilities, av erage $30 per month. Move in Feb. 8. 3514 Briarcrest Dr. Apt. No. 1, Bryan. 67t2 ATTENTION MARRIED COUPLES. One and 2 bed- room furnished apartments. Ready for occupancy. IVi miles south of campus. Lake for fishing. Washateria on grounds. Country atmosphere. Call D. R. Cain Co., .823-0934 or after 5, 846-8145 or 822-6135. 33tfn Sublease large, one bedroom, furnished. Friendly com plex. Close TAMU. Pool, bills paid, $220. Kirchner, 845-6335, 822-1480. 65t3 FULLTIME POSITIONS AVAILABLE PSYCHIATRIC INPATIENT UNIT CONTACT: DIRECTOR HOSPITAL SERVICES 822-7326 Ext. 39 CENTRAL BRAZOS VALLEY MENTAL HEALTH CENTER 60t8 ■ □□□■aamaaciH □□□□□■■a□□□b ■■■■BBBBDBHB BOBBOBBBBBEIG] SOSOLIKS TV & RADIO SERVICE INC. Zenith Sales and Services TV Rental 713 S. MAIN BRYAN 822-2133 SALES • SERVICE RENTALS Battalion Classified Call 845-2611 dating back to 1840. He stands out amid the lobby crowds because he is wearing a wide maroon tie with a picture of Robert A. Taft, a souvenir from the 1952 GOP convention. Reporting on his sales, Enten says “a lot of the younger people are for Reagan. You’ve got a small faction that is pushing very hard for Reagan. You’ve got some people that are very worked up.” The oldest item in his collection ol 3,000 to 4,000 buttons, badges and pictures is a pewter-like token pic turing Maj. Gen. William Henry Harrison, “the hero of Tippecanoe,” who was the successful Whig candi date in 1840. The button costs $45. Enten says he is a recent convert to the Republican party and that one of the factors has been the warm re ception his displays have received at Republican gatherings. “The Democrats don’t think it would be proper for me to set up my ntjof id sta rit) I osei t It phi it for Tho m’t e stand,” he said. Hm At the conference, Mary I tiers Smith, chairman of the Repu id ho National Committee, urged fey d group Thursday to work toget igmer elect a Republican presideiv .jd 1 Congress and said the race bet fe adr Ford and the former California Sen emor “need not he divisive. HA An informal conservative ejarijuc within the young RepublicanLs fro tional Federation decided to si iry to Reagan at a meeting WedneSow night, although the conferenci senfr is not allowed under its constit sers v to make a formal endorsement Ian t To counter this, the Ford >i eople ters circuited a list of more tbidesp state Young Republican cha rillian lining up behind the President Hire The President and Mrs. Forhyom vited the group to a receJl wc Thursday at the White Houst umni some top Ford personalities ioney neyed to the conference hotel listed > A&I CIA, Ford score victory in House bool dnt i Associated Press WASHINGTON — Following victory in his fight with the House intelligence committee over disclo sure of secrets, President Ford is visiting CIA headquarters for the swearing-in of George Bush as the agency’s new director. Bush, a former Texas congressman and U.S. envoy to Peking, was con firmed by the Senate earlier this week to succeed William E. Colby. President also arranged to meet today at the headquarters with CIA staff members in a lobby adorned with 32 stars honoring the 32 CIA employes killed in the line of duty. The House, by a vote of246 to 124, ordered its intelligence committee Thursday to either deliver the panel’s final report on U.S. intelli gence activities to the House as a secret document or get Ford’s ap proval to release it publicly. Ford hailed the step, saying the vote “shows the House members recognize that the American people want a strong and effective foreign intelligence capability .... Today’s House vote demonstrates that it also takes seriously its responsibility to protect national security secrets. A different view came from Rep. Otis Pike, D-N.Y., chairman of the intelligence panel, who said the House order gives Ford and the CIA the power to censor the committee’s report on the CIA and otherintH genee agencies. Pike said he’d rather issue noW report at all but said he did notl# 11 ^ * what the committee will decided® w ‘ “I do indeed see a cover-u*P which I think the Congress is fully participating,” Pike charm ' “. . . I think they (Ford’s advisB’" 0 have managed to block the repo' ‘The The House followed the it'here mendation of the committee’ssOch oi Republican, Rep. Robert McClof|thoi Illinois, who said the question ebran whether the House could be tn* Schr to keep its word. lames en at McClory said that publicatitjL secret information on covert Vhoui t tions without consulting Ford4 r J nc |. violate a committee-Fordagreem ern . giving Ford the final wordonrdB^s ing secrets. roni [} The secret information, rt.'H'e disclosed already through nMndi leaks, includes details on U.S, n d it submarines and CIA aid for AiJ| ^ Italian political parties and Kiiy° S( ' rebels in Iraq. ichran H I w; One portion deals with effrhat tii 1972 by then-U.S. ambassjpohgj Graham Martin to have the CBpf p e nel $800,000 to an Italian i4j e \ v “ gence official. The agency hafllid no t jected to the payments, sayinf he vie Italian official was a “neo-FasriM ” “SAVE A BUNDLE” Remember the old, Cash and Carry, money saving trick? Buy a pizza at the Commons Snack Bar and eat it there ortu it anywhere you wish. Prices are right, and the pizzas are Before Valentine’s Day Special [ftl •""‘“I Hamburger Pizza Sausage Pizza... Pepperoni Pizza. OPEN Monday thru Friday 11:00 a.m.-1:30 p.m. 7:00 p.m.-11:00 p.m. Saturday & Sunday 4:00 p.m.-11:00 p.m. you thing, c «nnei >xl. "''prei ’alias “QUALITY FIRST” i *$2-8!