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About The Battalion. (College Station, Tex.) 1893-current | View Entire Issue (July 12, 1978)
IIP ■■■■■■■■■ QbciNTERSTATE - < 'HQP 1 ' o*6-6/M ft 846-1 I UNIVERSITY SQUARE SHOPPING CINEMA I 1 I3»— — W_ jo aNier JastZrav^T |6ouble feature todayjjt - DA6«£N - OMEN WILLIAM HOLDEN LEE GRANT II 3:30 J : 30 IIW "THE MEPHISYO WALTZ" ALAN ALDA JACQUELINE BISSET jARBARAP ERKINS JJ the world JC [BAR -5:30,9:30- Neil Simon's The Cheap Detective Spanish violence spreads; ‘fiesta of bulls’ canceled United Press International PAMPLONA, Spain — A 19- year-old Basque youth San Sebas tian was shot and killed today as the outbreak of violence that canceled Pamplona’s famed running of the bulls spread through northern Spain. National radio said the dead youth, identified as Jose Ignacio Barandiaran, was among some 2,000 Basque separatists who were threatening the San Sebastian police station. One witness said an unidentified person fired a submachinegun and hit Barandiaran in the heart, the na tional news agency EFE said. At the same time, tens of thousands of workers staged work stoppages in Guipuzcoa Province and other Basque provinces to pro test the first death in the spreading violence — a 23-year-old left-wing student who was shot and killed Saturday near the Pamplona bull- ring. In San Sebastian — the capital of Guipuszoa Province and about 100 miles north of Pamplona — youths blocked National Highway 1 with barricades. Practically all businesses, stores and factories were closed today. SOUTHERN WAREHOUSE FACTORY SPECIAL ' AK.V* IF In the Basque industrial hub of Bilbao, strikers brought work to a halt in the Altos Hornos steel mills, the Lemoniz nuclear reactor con struction site and a General Elee- trica plant. In Madrid, the Congress of De puties demanded urgent action by the government to determine who was responsible for the outbreak of violence. A dozen left-wing political parties called for demonstrations and strikes in the major Basque cities, already tense because of a wave of killings by the separatist guerrilla group ETA. X SOUTHERN WAREHOUSE TUB RIDING 7 7 H.P. MOWER * Bif powrarful 7 H.P. Brins & * Stratton aofin*. Oozor blados, * catch an ft lawn carts avmaiafala. * OFFER GOOD FOR 30 DAYS ONLY! WHILE THEY LAST * * * * * * * + + * * * ♦ * * 4- * * 4- Ovar 2000 baaulirul MUSTANG RIDING MOWERS •hippad from our toutharn * ■K warehouse DIRECT OUT OF DALLAS WITH-IN 24 MRS., upon receipt ol cash- 4- -fc lor check or money order if you live with-in the flreater SE, SW, Virginia'* or Car* + olina Regions of the U.S. for faster service! TX. RESIDENTS ADO B% SALES TAX. + PLACE YOUR ORDER NOW OR WRITE FOR FREE PICTURE BROCHURE. 4. * MOW ITT MFC. SALES. DEPT. TN + -*« 407-B Lillard Rd., Arlington, Tex. 76012-(817)461-2751 ★ It was SO hot... The intense heat of the day adds to the al ready hypnotic illusion of these parking stripes in the seemingly deserted Wellborn Road parking lot. One Aggie braves the heat. Soviet dissidents in closed-session presumably heading homeward. All-S final day of classes yesterday marinid ti of first summer session classes. ,as h.im.iIiihi |ii«*ik2 Nat irvey requi on trial courts LOU NEEDS USED BOOKS! Lou’s stock of used books is low, so he’s buying every book he can at top prices right now! LOUPOT’S BOOKSTORE Northgate - Across from the Post Office SYLVESTER STALLONE FIST 4:15-7:00-9:40 Skyway Twin Thank Its F &JI linrfw*”TO ill «:;• Colwbla PictMras '01978 Columbia Pictures Industries. Inc PLUS DRIVE-IN PLUS TEENAGE GRAFFITTI Campus 846-6512 COLLEGE STATION STARTS WEDNESDAY MICHAEL BRANDON IN FM A NOW STORY WITH NOW AT THE SPEED OF SOUND. MUSIC COMING AT YOU Greyhound gives you three ways to ship. FAST. Greyhound Regular Package Express Servic#. in many cases, can send your packages up to 500 miles in less than 24 hours. Best of all. Greyhound Package Express costs a lot less than many other shipping services If you've got a rush shipment that needs priority handling. Greyhound's Next Bus Out" Service can handte it Greyhound guarantees it goes on the Next Bus Out or your special handling charge will be refunded For speedy pick-up or delivery, call Leo’s at 779-FAST. /NRBORNE Greyhound and Airborne have teamed up to bring Air Express to hundreds of smaller U S. cities Now. if you've got Greyhound, you've got Air Express Just ask tor Airborne" 'Greyhound Air Express. For further information cal' 779-8071 . College Station 112 Nagle 846-1774 SHP GREYHOUND Bryan 405 E. 29th 779-8071 I’niled Press liileriiutional MOSCOW — The espionage trial of Jewish activist Anatoly Shcharansky went into secret ses sion Tuesday while the court tried to link him with a U.S. reporter ac cused by the Soviets of spying. The judge at the trial of Alexander Giz- burg ejected the dissident's wife from the courtroom. Representatives of the U.S. Em bassy again kept vigils outside the closed courtrooms as a show of American concern over the trials, which have strained U.S.-Soviet re lations and brought an out-pouring of criticism from around the world. The Moscow court trying Shcharansky on charges of treason, which could bring him a death sen tence, Tuesday declared proceed ings top secret. A court spokesman said the 30-year-old computer ex pert was being questioned. Shcharansy’s brother — tin- only member of bis family allowed into court thus far — and a carefully selected and ticketed public audi ence were excluded while testimony was heard about ostensible national defense secrets. In the town of Kaluga 110 miles southwest of Moscow, Mrs. Irina Ginzburg was ordered to leave the courtroom after she called a prose cution witness a liar. Mrs. Ginzburg denounced wit ness Arkady Gradoboyev who told the court Monday that he had once been paid to provide information to Ginzburg, but recanted after “I realized that I was in the company of refined criminals.” Other witnesses have accused Ginzburg of thievery, being a drunk and staging sex orgies — while a witness in Tuesday's proceedings denounced the Ginzburgs because their children listened to broadcasts of the Voice of America instead of watching Soviet official television. Mrs. Ginzburg told reporters out side the Kaluga courthouse that the courtroom was packed with an anti-dissident audience which made the atmosphere “almost unbeara ble.” She said prosecution witnesses testified that Ginzburg's accusations that psychiatric treatment was used against dissidents were not true. At the same time, a Moscow court spokesman made it clear that the closed-session questioning of Shcharansky was aimed at establish ing his friendship and contacts ssitli former Moscow correspondent Robert Toth of the Los Angeles Times. Soviet authorities have accused Toth of being a U.S. intelligence agent. Toth was arrested and ques tioned by the KGB last summer. He was later released and left the coun try- "The above-mentioned foreigner was worming out information that is not subject to publication in the open press on the Soviet space re search program and classified in formation in the field of sociological research and parapsychology, the court spokesman told reporters at a briefing. By Uni N D lothi 1 night ever the .• 1 Wil Shcharansky lusq his contacts with Tof ern reporters and! v isiting American Mi and denied flatly thil^ them with defenses | )e p ( 'Hie Soviet govern, a y ( , fiisetf to allow frirti* en jj, dents. Western rqx^nal 1 diplomats to attendtk ma (| were expected to coetL a q-v. this week. o nea Shcharansky and Cr 1 * 1 * s j dared their innoc«*f non ^ trials opened Mosf >s ? r * * showt>d no signs of hr- , ler during 17 months of finement in separateF* pu When the Kalueied lea Gin/burg his iiatkxufrxt sea "Prisoner.” year, Shcharansky opened for ] firing his court-apppfue ch and announced he e to ge himself. ig ch; The opening t»f th* trials brought a barnff mostly from the L- o 111 harsh sentences c< chances of congress! of a Strategic Art Treaty. N A' But despite the Secretary of State C)i* t s * - it Washington news c<, c j^ a trials cannot be alloa^ j> ' with the new round >. s , UV 16 ’ * opening arms talk Geneva. FRONT END ALIGNMENT $Q95 J Italian ter strike with (Most American & Foreign Cars) jLlniversity Tire & Service Center J 509 University Dr. 846-5613 (Next to Wyatt's Sporting Goods) III] I ng t n his ssed > n an She otl ; to g ( mpbe he be Wit! I nited Pri-u Intflgents ROME — Terrorist^'the three Italian cities ing bombs in Turin a" : rTLE shooting it Naples city wiven t in the legs in a Red t'„ “kneecapping.” Police in Naples said- LAKEVIEW CLUB 25. a eity hall emplojl'-'C^' union official, was ' ti 3 Miles N. on Tabor Road Saturday Night: Bob Luman & The Stone River Band From 9-1 p.m. STAMPEDE DANCE Every Thursday Night Ladies $1.00 Men $2.00 All Brands, Cold Beer 45 Cents 8-12 parked car as he n home from work. t His was the fourth a week. The other three; work of the Red Brigad who kidnapped and former Premier Aldo M. Ti m e bombs destroy three Fiat showrooms it" and anonymous caller > *fp phoned the Italian ANSA to claim respons# — attacks on behalf of thej Workers Nuclei, a sni<JP^^ terrorist group. A time bomb in Row aged a municipal buildi the Italian Journalists lij FINE HANDCRAFTED GIFTS AT ,rC Bd. , IF YOU NEED A NICE GIFT OR IFYC 1 "” WOULD LIKE TO EXHIBIT YOUR W0( s l0 < COME DOWN TO THE CRAFT SHOP IN»57o ,hv * MSC BASEMENT, AND SEE US, OR CALL 845-1631.