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About The Battalion. (College Station, Tex.) 1893-current | View Entire Issue (Sept. 10, 1981)
l wmmmmm Page 16 THE BATTALION THURSDAY, SEPTEMBER 10, 1981 Houston Chronicle Discount PRICE! MORNING DELIVERY For Texas A&M Students, Faculty & Staff Sept. 8-Dec. 18 Sept. 8-Dec. 31 $-| 50 $12 75 JUST CALL 693-2323 or 846-0763 Houston Chronicle We Put A Little Extra In Your Day BUSINESS OPPORTUNITIES AVAILABLE AT POST OAK MALL COLLEGE STATION, TX CBL & Associates, Inc., owner/developer of the soon-to-be completed 1,020,000 square-foot enclosed Post Oak Mall in College Station, TX, is hosting a Franchise Meeting — open to the public. If you have ever considered owning your own franchise busi ness, CBL & Associates, Inc., is providing this opportunity for you to fully ir vestigate the possibilities of operating your own business in the Post Oak Mall. Representatives of several fran chises will be available to discuss their operations and answer your questions. Athlete's Foot Athletic Attic Bathtique C & C Foods Captain D's Chick-Fil-A Flowerama Hickory Farms Just Pants Long John Silvers Microwave Cooking Orange Julius Philly Mignon Shakey's T-Shirts Plus PLAN TO ATTEND: Date: Tuesday, Sept. 15, 1981 Time: 4 p.m. to 9 p.m. Place: Holiday Inn 1503 Texas Ave. South College Station, TX PICTURE PERFECT MEMORIES. As easy as crossing the street. Now you can get superb Pentax quality 35mm pictures easily, automatically... and inexpensively... with exciting new Pentax MV “Stop-Caution-Go” red, yellow and green LEDs in the bright viewfinder make quality pictures as easy to take as crossing the street. GREEN...shoot. RED...don’t. YELLOW...use the optional AF-200S Auto Flash for great indoor shots. SPECIAL For A Limited Time — With Every Purchase Of A Pentax Camera & Normal Lens — A FREE Pentax U.V. filter and FREE TICKET TO KODAK SEMI NAR a $ 34.00 Value — FREE! So take a walk on GREEN and see the Pentax MV today. It’ll make memories you won’t forget! $238.00 With 50mm f/1.7 Standard lens Pentax AF-200S Auto Flash $72 50 PENTAX aMTO^ ft|CAMPUS PHOTO CENTER National / World Officials^ ho£e Reagan approves Air Force alters missile proiec c United Press International OMAHA — Some Air Force officials are hoping President Reagan will announce a decision today on a scaled-down proposal concerning the MX intercontinen tal ballistic missile. The Omaha World-Herald reported. The newspaper said Tuesday the Air Force has sharply revised its proposal for deploying MX mis siles and decreased the program’s cost by $10 billion. The Air Force has told Defense Secretary Caspar Weinberger a reduced deployment of 100 mobile MX missiles to be shuttled among 1,000 shelters would be acceptable, the newspaper said, temporarily abandoning its three- year fight for 200 missiles and 4,600 shelters. Although there was no indica tion of White House reaction to the plan, sources told The World- Herald it could be politically acceptable to Reagan. The smaller MX deployment would cost about $23 billion com pared with $33 billion outlined in the original concept and probably would meet with less resistance from the public. The World- Herald said. The entire program would be centered in Lincoln and Clark counties in southeastern Nevada and not far from Las Vegas where the business community generally has supported the plan to base the a xz ‘A Fine Southern Tradition’ presents: Fall RUSH Thursday September 10 Tuesday September 15 All partys - K.A. House 8:30 — At the EJ El ■ For more info 693*3019 OR 696-6926 T^wir i ii ^ n*, oU Collie missiles in desert valleys, the newspaper said. All missile shelter and support facilities would be on land now owned by the government. Some Air Force leaders are hoping Reagan will use today’s ceremony at the Pentagon to dedi cate the new MacArthur Corridor — named after the late general — to announce decisions on the MX and possibly on a new bomber for the Strategic Air Command. A source told The World Herald the Air Force views the revised proposal as “something on which we could build if it appears as if the Soviet threat is not dimin ishing.’’ The source said future activity could involve “perhaps an anti- ballistic missile system. Perhaps more missiles and more shelters. Perhaps a combination of the two,” the source said. “At the same time, we would engage in research and develop ment on an air-mobile MX and deep underground basing. We would not just he producing 100 missiles and building 1,000 shel ters,” the source said. “We would be continuing our research and development as a hedge against the future.” The source said approval of the plan would “send a message to our allies and to the other side that, after study and delay through three administrations, we are showing determination; that we are serious.” “This would not be a closed de cision, it would be an interim solu tion. ” The new plan calls for locating missile facilities in an area of 3,500 square miles as opposed to more than 5,000 square miles proposed for the larger development. An aggregate of 13 square miles would be closed to the public. That would include 21 acres for each shelter, one large main oper ating base to be built in the Coyote Spring area, about 60 miles east of Las Vegas, and a sizable support base. The original concepts which the shelters would be connected by unpaved roads, and missiles would be moved from shelter to Vi shelter at random, remain changed. Instead of being spotted a apart, shelters would be all. two miles from each other the revised plan. The additional sepatf r”"" would serve the LOADS(lo»i ~ tude air defense system) t jU ballistic missile system being . ^ veloped by the Army todetent . j V specific shelters that could threatened by an incomings# ,vfter warhead and to protect only it ^ ou tl shelters. “One-mile spacing would be enough for LOADS," source told The World-Herat Most of the proposed MX in that tion area is close enough toi Weel Vegas to enable construe «de workers to live in that cityr ivouh commute to work. The influx of construction* ers and families into relatively spoiled desert areas has b jf thi major point of opposition to ictior larger MX system proposal. The source said sroots opposition to the MX lose not 1 On mtioi existed in Utah than in New fowr Judge recommends charges be dropped vlf* vL- -l* -X- vT-. kL- nL- kL. vL* vL* —J— —T* "T' 'T* -T' -T* - T > ' 'T* # T'* -T* *T > TIRED OF COOKING & WASHING DISHES? United Press International SAN SALVADOR, El Salvador — A Salvadoran judge recom mended a request for the United States to extradite a wealthy Salva doran, accused in the murder of two American land reform ex perts, be dropped for lack of evi dence, court officials say. It is the second time in a month a Salvadoran judge has recom mended charges be dropped against suspects in the murder last January of Mark David Pearlman, 36, of Seattle, Wash., and Michael Hammer, of Potomac, Md. Court officials Tuesday said Judge Felix Antonio Orellana re commended an extradition re quest against Hans Christ, a weal thy Salvadoran in custody in Miami, be revoked for lack of evi dence. Christ and his brother-in-law Ricardo Sol Meza were accused of shooting to death Pearlman, Ham mer and the head of El Salvador’s Agrarian Reform Institute, Rodol fo Viera, on Jan. 3 in a hotel coffee shop in San Salvador. A hotel waitress initially told police she saw Christ and Sol Meza leaning over the bodies of the Americans, who were working on San Salvador’s land reform program under the aegis of the AFL-CIO’s Institute of Free Labor Development. Last month, a judge recom mended charges be dropped against Sol Meza because the wai tress, Teresa de Jesus Torres- Lopez, changed her version of the shootings. Torres-Lopez, the state’s sole witness, is now living in the United States for fear of her safety. El Salvador’s Supreme Court, which must rule on the recom mendation submitted Monday by Orellana, said it would act “in a short period of time” on the extra dition request against Christ. Christ has been held in ill >ecte jail since April pending th come of the extradition req/ In other developments,i ] e rir Evi his w guerrillas Tuesday Mario Levy Van Severen.X owner of a liquor distillery jifterc his San Salvador home. Hk viously unknown Franciscoi lio Mena Sandoval ConMjarrie claimed responsibility, Three guerrillas ambusli 24 hours around Suchitoti miles north of the capital, rebels dead and one woi he U ittem ;avei o thi while injuring one soldier, military spokesmen said. At least 17 political a tions were reported Ttf rasily around the Central-Amerie • defen tion where political violenif killed 22, (XX) people since Jr urioti 1980, local authorities said. Bnany impre ,ce, orecr fayle he B Bay rards affen; romp roum As )f the nyury ioacl Thr ffort: llowr Then dine at the MSG each * evening. How can anyone f prepare a meal for as little * as $2.19 plus tax? You will | find the answer at the MSG * from 4 p.m. to 7 p.m. each * evening. * “ QUALITY FIRST” $ ‘Yen’ for honesty leads] man to return money Battalion Classifieds (Call 845-2611, United Press International CHICACO — Stan Peterson got a few thousand yen, a bottle of sake and a warm feeling by return ing a briefcase containing more than $17,000 to the Japanese gra duate student who lost it. Peterson, a grinder operator at the Fisher Body Plant in Springs, Ill., returned the I . ^ ei case to Masaaki Abe Moni orma the Countryside Police ft; ment. „ O <2/ Bar-B-Que Meals: BAR-B-QUE PLATTER $ 3 75 Bar-B-Qued Beef with beans, potato salad, pickles and bread. BAR-B-QUE SANDWICH Sliced Bar-B-Qued Beef on fresh bread. $^>25 We LOADING ZONE of Aggieland Family Restaurant AGGIE OWNED & OPERATED 404 University Drive in University Center OPEN 7 DAYS A WEEK 693-8869 K&M SEBRING SCHOOL OF HAIR DESIGN All work done by Senior Students at reduced salon rates! 693-7878 “fi&M Sebring School of Hair Design” 693-7878 406 Texas Ave. Down from Gibsons He said he retrieved tk after it fell from the car. He opened it at ho* found $5,500 in AmericanK er’s checks, 1.8 million Ja;#*' aus /ear. yen, Abe’s visa and passport Officials said with the * X*fens rate of exchange the moneyi to more than $17,000 in Hi rency. een ithlet lent ^ggit high* “When I saw whatwasii knew he would neediCPtH said. Abe, his wife and d( the United States three (to from Tokyo. Abe, 31, was duled to begin a Soviet gi program at the University cago and had planned to i® money to pay his tuition. Peterson said when he ret the briefcase Monday, Mfi started to cry. T knew they were very tin and it gave me a nice said. Peterson was able to local* by calling a local radio statf police in the area. He said H almost six hours to track do 4 ’ couple. SHERI RYMAN MISS TEXAS ’81 m m formerly Miss Texas A&M in the Miss America Pageant on the Big Screen TV in the MSC Main Lounge on Sept. 12 at 9 p.m. Sponsored by: MSC Video & MSC Hospitality