The Battalion. (College Station, Tex.) 1893-current, April 11, 1980, Image 8

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    Page 8 THE BATTALION
FRIDAY, APRIL 11, 1980
jtort
nation
STEAKHOUSE
*4^
A UNIQUE EXPERIENCE IN GOOD FOOD, FUN
AND FRIENDS.
2528 S. Texas College Station
MSG GQEAT ISSUES
PresetiLs:
AN ANSWED TO
THE ENECGY CRUNCH
SYNTHETIC FUELS'
April 15 - 12:30 p.m.
Rudder Forum
Dr. Irgolic from the Center for Energy and Mineral
Resources and Drs. Anthony and Harris from the
Chemical Engineering department will be speak
ing on the prospective uses of synthetic fuels.
This discussion will include the topic of coal
liquification, and the use of ethanol and methanol
as sources of fuel.
*»>!*« * 'A
Address
yourself
to a new
lifestyle
You’ve made it through another
semester with flying colors. Now
treat yourself to a better lifestyle.
You deserve it. □ A new ad
dress that has campus conveni
ence. Patios or balconies for
outside entertaining. Wooded
seclusion or lively atmosphere.
□ Southwest Village has a
quiet atmosphere perfect for heavy studying. And you’re only
minutes from campus via the shuttle bus. Southwest Village
offers four floorplans,
furnished or unfurnished,
for families or adults.
In your spare time, try
our tennis courts, pool,
wooded picnic area,
and clubhouse with
saunas and game room.
□ Country Place
caters especially to your needs: walking distance to campus.
Semester leases. Lively all-adult atmosphere. Six floorplans,
from efficiencies to two bedrooms
ideal for roommates. To lure you
away from too much studying,
Country Place has a large swim
ming pool and recreation room.
□ Next semester, address yourself
to a new lifestyle. No one deserves it
more than you.
Atiimiif/,
Country Place
3902 College Main.
846-0515
Southwest Village
1101 S. IV Parkway
693-0804
Now accepting applications for summer
and fall semesters.
COMPASS PROPERTY MANAGEMENT, INC.
Battalion Classifieds Call 845-2611
Carter hopes policy
persuasive to Iran
United Press International
WASHINGTON — President
Carter said Thursday he hopes the
sanctions against Iran will be “per
suasive,” but warned the United
States is prepared to use all its legiti
mate power to free the American
hostages.
In a tough foreign policy speech
prepared for delivery to the Amer
ican Society of Newspaper Editors,
Carter also declared that he would
use “legal means if necessary” to en
force his decision not to send a U.S.
team to the Moscow Olympics.
Carter said he did not regret his
past policy of restraint during the
five months the hostages have been
in captivity.
“But it has become necessary —
because Iran would not act in accord
ance with international law and their
own interests — for us to act again,”
he said.
“The steps I have taken this week
to end diplomatic relations and im
pose sanctions are firm and substan
tive, and we hope they will be per
suasive,” he said.
“America will continue the careful
and considered exercise of power,”
he said. “We will pursue every —
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• Quick Service
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and I repeat — every legitimate use
of that power to bring our people
home, safe and free.”
Administration officials have
hinted that the United States is pre
pared to impose a naval quarantine
in the Persian Gulf as a next possible
step in reprisals against Iran.
“It is imperative that the Iranian
government resolve this crisis,’’Car
ter said.
“Every day that the crisis con
tinues further isolates Iran,” he said.
“Every day that the American
Embassy remains a prison pushes
Iran itself farther into lawlessness,
down and down the spiral of dis
order,” he added.
“With a return of rationality, in
ternational lawlessness need not be
Iran’s fate,” he said. “Bankruptcy —
political as well as moral — need not
be its future.”
He also said that “if interference
from the outside is a threat” to Iran,
it does not come from the United
States.
IBM: no to tall
on divestiture
United Press International
WASHINGTON — Interna
tional Business Machines Corp.
says it will not negotiate further
toward settling a decade-old fed
eral antitrust suit unless the Jus
tice Department drops its “pre
condition” that IBM be broken
up.
“We have not cut off negotia
tions,” a company spokesman in
New York said Wednesday, “but
we wouldn’t return to formal
negotiations unless the Justice
Department withdraws this pub
lic precondition they have placed
on the negotiations — namely di
vestiture.”
IBM issued the ultimatum four
weeks after Sanford M. Litvack,
the department’s new antitrust
chief, told reporters the govern
ment will not settle out
for anything less than “struct®
relief that would change
makeup of the industry.”
But Litvack’s statement tii}
gered an exchange with
general counsel, Nicholas Kt
zenbach, who said IBM “wili®
negotiate on the basis ofthesta;
tural relief which has been tit
government’s objective in
litigation.”
The Justice Department
IBM in 1969 in what has
the longest federal antitrust
in history.
The suit charged that
which has annual sales of
than $20 billion and eontn
more than half the computer mi|
ket, is a monopoly and should!
broken up.
A -
Food prices to go up
OVERNIGHT RATES — U DURING THE DAY
Reductions €f Dissertations
Collation & Binding & Podding
WE HAVE A XEROX 9400 - THE BEST COPYING MACHINE IN THE WONJM
Kinko’s Graphics, Inc.
201 College Main St. 17131846-9508
United Press International
WASHINGTON — Food prices
— particularly for beef, sugar and
carbonated drinks — should increase
significantly during the next three
months, but still not as rapidly as the
cost of other consumer goods, the
government said Thursday.
In a joint report, the Council on
Wage and Price Stability and the De
partment of Agriculture predicted
food prices would rise at about a 10
percent annual rate in the second
quarter, double the rate of increase
in the first quarter.
The report predicted retails
and sweet prices would rise si
in the second quarter as woi
bonated drinks and other prot&
foods that contain sugar. ^ y 0U
The agencies said beefprittSijjjj w 'j]j
also expected to increase and ;i 6 j {enc j v
for poultry, fats and oils, andpa&j.pja
sed fruits and vegetables sho: ti
moderately.
There was some good ne« The Hur
The agencies said retail porird[ into t
egg prices should fall duringtbjBht at 7
few months. j ■ n> m(
seifs nat
Anderson still in GO
B) slot i
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COUPON
Try our Great-Tastin'
CHICKEN FRIED STEAK
$ 1" special
served with baked potato or french fries. Reg.
$2.69.
Good Mon.-Thurs. from
4:30 P.M.-10 P.M.
CTer expires Thurs., April 17
a COUPON
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Student Educational Loans
Loans To Qualified
Graduating Seniors
711 University Drive
United Press International
WASHINGTON — Underdog
Republican presidential contender
John Anderson said Thursday he
would not turn his back on the GOP
even if he decides to run as an inde
pendent in the fall.
“I have not by any means given up
hope of continuing the fight for the
Republican presidential nomina
tion,” he told the American Society
of Newspaper Editors.
But he said he does “intend to
fight back” if the choice is between
President Carter and Republican
front-runner Ronald Reagan, who
both, he said, are offering “the same
evasions and platitudes that past
generations of politicians have
served up.”
He said he has no desire to create a
third party and that “I would not,
incidentally, in mounting a
pendent candidacy, be
Republican Party.”
Anderson, returning froiTh Texas
paigning in California, said ir$ s opposi
less of what he decides abouunpete in
dependent campaign, hewilk 5 Invitat:
Reagan and George Bush in the, Calif.
3 California primary. He sugjpunt ac<
the May 6 Indiana primary,Busiest
only he and Reagan areonthelfte 100
might determine the futurecotf m <?ter n
his candidacy. ■ relay
He said of the independent " ( ,
being urged upon him bysomT s^nfo
ers, “It is conceivable. ItispiWg arre
that that could eventuate aiif
that could develop.”
Anderson said he has no tin |
for making a decision on an ^ |
dent campaign.