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About The Battalion. (College Station, Tex.) 1893-current | View Entire Issue (Oct. 31, 1979)
THE BATTALION Page 11 WEDNESDAY, OCTOBER 31, 1979 the world ‘psule,’’ she ions would i a rarity, w® appeared beh niics were sell finitely U i ilevision >rld’’ syndrot se of danger, ii ist,” the anti orin is. The panel sked to come estions on ene to the preside! ididates say h through then ry onths andon* he White Hot J leld accountall ehran students protest again United Press International t ._„HRAN, Iran — Hundreds of ? i school students took to the ets of Tehran Tuesday for a sec- day of demonstrations demand- better education facilities, e protest, sparked by Monday’s mt demonstration opposing a emment ban on classroom poli- and private school fees, had eral hundred boys and girls ching through the capital and iting slogans for their demands, londay’s protesters were at- ied by pro-government militants edwith knives and daggers, who »dat the pupils, injuring six of ix attackers were seized by stu- !s and brought to Tehran Uni- iity campus, where they were , . , , Id by a kangaroo court in the m o epsp ence q £ ^ un j vers ity chancel- }au f, wett Mohammad Maleki. e o e iBOitj 3ur students who were among a t New Hampsl r >.A. haveloba President Laa group that staged a sit-in at the edu cation department of the western city of Tariz were arrested Monday during similar protests, press re ports said today. Pars news agency reported other demonstrations by students and un employed youths in towns across the Islamic nation. In the northwest, the government reported, Kurdish rebels staged new attacks on government posi tions. Five government soldiers died while repulsing a Kurdish attack Monday night on the northwestern town of Bukan, officials announced, and troops posted elsewhere in the Kurdish area came under renewed attacks during the past 24 hours. Kurdish rebel sources claimed the town of Bukan was occupied by the Kurds and revolutionary guardsmen were forced to evacuate their base, besieged since Saturday be irregular Kurdish forces. The Kurds also said their leader. Sheikh Ezzeddin Hosseini, rejected cease-fire proposals and presented government negotiators with stiff demands. In another development, the Et- telaat newspaper Monday published a front page comment that com plained, “Nowadays the press re ceives a treatment which befits the enemies of the people, not the na tion’s true representatives and its voice.” The commentary followed the resignation of radical Islamic politi cian Kazem Sami as Health Minis ter. Sami cited a growing public dis content and distance between the people and the Islamic regime that included media censorship. It also came a day after Ayatollah Ruhollah Khomeini, the de facto head of state, told a gathering of students in Qom, “May the pens working for the superpowers break. May the tongues talking in their interests be cut.” The comment was sparked by a suit filed against the paper by Ayatollah Ahamad Azari-qomi charging the paper with insulting the former Tehran prosecutor by linking him to a revolutionary offi cial reportedly caught taking bribes. The official, identified in Azari- qomi’s suit only as Iliyavi, was in strumental in the shutdown of more than 40 newspapers and journals by the former prosecutor last summer when Azari-qomi assigned him to look into “press affairs.” The Ettelaat’s front-page protest said Iran without newspapers would turn into a “cemetery where only the dictators are free to breathe. “What benefit are you going to draw from this suppression and si lence?” it asked. “Beware. Time is lying in ambush for the arrogant.” ‘Sombrero’ capturing most oil United Press International MEXICO CITY -A metal cone designed to trap most of the oil spewed by a runaway well in the Gulf of Mexico already is captur ing at least 60 percent of the crude in its inital phase of opera tions, officials said. Spokesmen for the govern ment oil monopoly Petroleos Mexicanos Monday said the 310-ton metal “sombrero,” still undergoing adjustments, was re covering 6,000 barrels of oil a day, or 60 percent of an esti mated 10,000 barrels a day gush ing out of the crippled Ixtoc 1 well in the Bay of Campeche. PEMEX spokesmen added the cone may be recovering as much as 80 percent because the gusher may be smaller. They said the exact flow will be measured in the next few days. Since the well blew out June 3, it has spilled more than 2.5 million barrels of oil into the Gulf of Mexico, polluted beaches as far north as Texas and sparked more than $250 million in dam age suits. WHEN IT'S MORE THAN ROMANCE. it Israeli political crisis continues abinet shuffle aids Begin s fortunes United Press International major Cabinet reshuffle that Jd leave Israeli Prime Minister | pachem Begin in temporary con- \l/ 710 D ^ e k )re ‘K n ministry appeared iday to have bettered Begin s I 1 ices of surviving the worst polit- Qf/1 Oj 'crisis of his tenure. O I'll'Vl jt the beleaguered Begin, 66, faced problems arising from a me Court order to dismantle a is in keepiagi a hilltop outpost in the oc- o revere tel e( j ^ est ganh anc j a debate in esbutnotitj Knesset (parliament) on an r names involf n( j men t to the abortion law. n - . »banese and Palestinian reports became offe charged Israeli tanks sup- lanager Slep e( j hy artillery pushed into s brother-w [j Lebanon but were driven ion or a Kems : across the border by heavy mmittee all s tj n i an guerrilla fire, id quartern! T e j Aviv, the Israeli military dealership man( j denied any such attack, igton, lesstli! thing of the kind happened,” a ite House. ; esma n said. is gufiig^ IN, headquarters in Naquora, ncl reported to New York the It is ourtflh was between Lebanese army jade Maj. Saad Haddad’s ili-backed Christian forces and 'alestinian guerrillas and no Is- armored vehicles were in- jdy sliouldki of the Wl io part in It nnittee ejcepl] granting pfl on his befell : questions Si vs conference ncement was rampaign is® / Jo Kopechi Chappaqtf ator has tafen imself. Itisa t will always a matter of He adcfecftli^ e up to the s' ild be a camp* 1 rioN U.N. spokesman in New York U N. officials at Naquora re ed the Haddad forces started the shooting with machine-gun fire Monday afternoon. The Palestine Liberation Organization forces re sponded with two mortar rounds. The report said the Christian militia fired 90 tank and 24 artillery and mortar rounds in the next 90 minutes. U.N. headquarters then requested a halt to the fighting and the firing stopped, the report to New York said. The abortion amendment, a payoff to the ultraorthodox Agudath Yisrael Party, would bar abortions on the grounds of “social distress” — poverty and deprivation. Health Minister Eliezer Shostak was to present the amendment to the Knesset in Jerusalem despite warnings by deputies of the Liberal wing of Begin s governing Likud bloc and the Democratic Move ment, one of the five components of Begin s coaliton, they would oppose it. Government sources said Begin was confident he also could over come the other problem currently threatening his government — the Supreme Court order to remove 15 Jewish families within three weeks from the Elon Moreh outpost over looking the Arab city of Nablus. Begin’s Cabinet scheduled a spe cial session Thursday to debate the issue and proposals by two hawkish ministers for widespread Jewish set tlement in the West Bank and Gaza. The ultranationalist Gush Emunim movement, whose mem bers live at Elon Moreh, decided Monday to launch “Operation Dou ble” aimed at doubling the surface area and the number of settlers in Jewish settlements in the West Bank. rrrrrrrrrrrry^^Ti'TnnrB~aTrgTTTfvinr THE BEST BURGERS IN TOWN — Just across the street! Plus great homemade onion i rings, fries and chicken-fried steak sandwiches. CALL IN YOUR ORDER 846-7466 University Drive at Wellborn Overpass M.-Th. 10 to 10 Sun. 11 to 11 F.-S. 10 to 11 WlA, ajlb-Bji ft a a a A.g gjLa-fl. a.a.a. a. a baraa* Aft g.g..p <> ° ° ° ° ° a PLAIN P0PPV RYE FRESH HOT ONION • SESAME l SALT • jd in ORDERS TAKEN : THROUGH OCT. 31 : • TO ORDER CALL | HILLEL AT 696-7313 • OR CALL 846-1492 EVENINGS l A BRAZOS VALLEY INSTITUTION For an enjoyable meal with family and friends AN AGGIE FAVORITE 1803 Texas Ave. Bryan Next Day Picture Pledge: You get your netures back he next day or you get FREE Kodak in (110, 126 & 135 C-41 film excluding holidays). Photo-Tech! Say, that’s the place in town where I can leave my Halloween pictures and get them back the next day — and they’ve got a night deposit too — I can hardly wait! Hee... Hee... Hee... PHOTO-TECH 813 S. Texas College Station 696-0034 (Next to Pasta’s Pizza) Convenience at everyday low prices 5X7 from your favorite color nega tive - must be selected at time newly-processed roll of film is picked up (C-41). Offer expires Nov. 10, 1979 mammammmmmmCOUpOn «■■■■*■■■ Lettra' Diamond Wedding Band. Two diamonds - facets of eternity cling securely to the continuous unbroken circle. A carefully sculptured family letter surrounds them marking more than a bond - a beginning. Each day a beginning. cLiqdsey’s JEWELERS MANOR EAST MALL M-F 10 AM-8-.30 PM SAT 10 AM-6 PM Sr PARTY SET-UPS 7 A.M. 11 P.M. o % ICE 693-4750 RHEA'S Country Store 2751 Longmire, C.*B. 693-8733 MMMHfeiaBMM * TIRED OF JUST | TRICKIN’ & TREATIN’ i ON HALLOWEEN? WELL THEN — COME TO ZACHARIAS 4TH ANNUAL HALLOWEEN BASH PRIZES FOR: * * -K * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * -K * * * * * * i* BEST COSTUME — MOST ORIGINAL PUMPKIN & APPLEJ ¥ ¥ * BOBBING IN A VAT OF BEER. ,¥ — TONIGHT It’s Our Once-A-Year STORE-WIDE SALE! We’re drastically cutting prices on everything in the store. You’ll never again be able to buy car stereo at prices like this. Prices will be going up for the new year, so now’s the perfect time to do your Christmas shopping and save money too! -JENSEN RECEIVERSn R-420 AM/FM/Cassette Receiver 10 watts/channel $ 295 29 R-410 AM/FM/Cassette Receiver $00039 5 watts/channel ^09 R-400 AM/FM/Cassette Receiver 5 watts/channel $15959 R-402 AM/FM/Cassette Receiver «.« rn 5 watts/channel ^ | y | SPEAKERS sp-757 Coaxial Speakers 5”X7” $4159 a pair ®SANYO UNITS FT-478 AM/FM/Cassette Receiver for $0099 small imports SPEAKER TYPE PRICE PER PAIR SP410 4x10 triaxials 67.99 SP777 6x9 triaxials 75.59 SP768 6x9 coaxials 52.89 SP759 5x7 triaxials 60.49 SP780 coaxial separates .... 67.99 SP731 5’’ coaxials 33.99 SP720 4” coaxials 29.99 SP737 5” triaxials 52.89 SP708 4” dual cone 15.89 UNIT PA6050 powerbooster (25 watts/channel) PA6060 biamp powerbooster (30 watts/channel) FT482 AM/FM/Cassette FT481 AM/FM/Cassette FT418 AM/FM/Cassette FT 645 AM/FM/Cassette digital FT1877 biamp AM/FM/8-track FT 1001 underdash 8-Track FT603 Underdash cassette with auto rev PRICE $103.69 172.79 136.59 109.19 159.89 153.69 179.69 83.69 63.69 JENSEN PRICE PER PAIR $98.79 57.39 47.89 93.49 SPEAKER J-1033 6x9 trlaxlals . J-1041 5" coaxials . 6x9^coaxlala 67.09 J-1044 mid-range twaater J-1001 3-way saparates ... SPEAKERS C-9991 4X10 Triaxial Speakers $6239 C-9994 4x10 coaxials .. 38.99 C-9997 dual cona 4x10 . 27.29 C-9729 6x9 dual cona .. 27.29 C-9852 5” coaxials .... 38.19 C-9851 4" coaxials .... 34.19 C-9660 4" dual cona ... 23.09 niOIMECJR SPEAKERS SPEAKER TS-202 . TS-202 . TS-M2 . TS-107 . TS-692 . TS-121 . TS-164 . TS-167 . TS-160 . TS-411 . TS-681 . TS-410 . TS-571 . TS-695 . TS-T3 ... TS-W203 :e per pair $155.99 32.99 32.99 36.69 46.79 30.79 41.09 51.09 25.69 51.39 49.39 35.09 46.79 97.29 46.79 132.59 £11 UNITS TE-70 Equalizer 30 watts/channel . TC-1500 AM/FM — 8 Track 6 watts/channel .. $ 58 79 *65 79 TE-1000 AM/ FM/Cassette TC-5000 AM/FM/Cassette 6 watts/channel w/auto reverse $ 65 $ 98 79 59 ALL MAXELL & TDK TAPES 20% 'O OFF (Limit 3 Per Day) ALL LPs 75C OFF! PRE-RECORDED (That’s 5c Over Cost!) TAPES (Tapes in Stock) Sale Prices Good Through Sat., November 3 (Installations Available on Appointment Basis Only During Sale) FINANCING AVAILABLE Prescription STEREO 3602 Old College (Across from the Chicken OH Co. & next to Tri-State Sporting Goods) 846-1393