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About The Battalion. (College Station, Tex.) 1893-current | View Entire Issue (Sept. 27, 1982)
national Battalion/Page 7 September 27, 1982 -m \ ( ar Monday APOLLO CLUB:Come and npany. Sign up now until Oct. 1 from 16 MSC. Membership costs $15 for met non-members. Everyone is invited. general meeting will be held in 604A&B in Rud- AGGIELAND:Now through Oct. U r more information, contact Marie Howell at 846- th eir pictures taken for th% yearbool ates at 1700 Puryear. For more i , JEWISH STUDENT CENTER:Yom Kippur Donn Friedman at 845-2682. wUi k. n 10 am., a memorial service at 4:S0 p.m., MARKETING SOCIETY; A me- : ‘ he-fast at 6 p.m. in the Jewish Student p.m. in 701 Rudder Tower. Dillard’s presents the topic. •RSITY LUTHERAN CHAPEL:A study of the DANCE ARTS SOCIETYTUass for Beginntt ; of Revelation will be held at 7:S0 p.m. in the Univer- be held from 6 p.m. to 7 p.m., Intermediate I at St t ft M Moif. 1.. . . C. n ~ ~ Ct ~ ] A Ui .1 C. zatit PAMI ;g 7 p.m. to 10:30 p.m >C POLITICAL FORUM: lins will speak on “From House to Texas Vote” in a meeting at 8 :ramural-recreat 3E:An extramural sports dub >:30 p.m. in 162 E. Kyle. Also, entt ' :kleball singles and dou' ’ mt. Sign up in the inti; )MEDICAL SCIENCE A PLACEMENT CENTERrA j [>!acement center ar p.m. in 201 Veterinary [AS A&M SWIM TEAM: mm Rock music causes action in Milwaukee United Press International MILWAUKEE — A minis ter’s crusade and a disk jockey’s high rise stunt have made rock ‘n’ roll the burning issue in the land where beer and butter are king. Backers of a minister who claims rock music is the work of Satan will get a record crunch. On the flip side, a radio dee- jay has vowed to camp on a 21st floor building ledge until the rock group the Who agrees to play Milwaukee on its farewell tour across the nation. The Rev. Paul Risley of the interdmominational Corner stone Church of Burlington said he will hold two-hour seminars tonight and Tuesday night on “The Power of Rock ‘n’ Roll.” On hand will be a garbage com pactor for those who want to crush records they consider evil, he said. He said he doesn’t condemn all rock music. But he thinks many rock stars, either know ingly or unknowingly, are send ing messages about devil wor ship through their lyrics or are including trappings of witch craft and satanism on their album covers. He cited 55 dangerous per formers, including the Rolling Stones, Black Sabbath, Alicf Cooper, Uriah Heep and Ozz) Osbourne. Risley said part of the Led Zeppelin’s song, “Stairway tc Heaven” — played backward — says “Here’s to you sweet Satan.’ Meanwhile, WQFM deejay “Tim the Rock ‘n’ Roll Animal’ climbed out a window to his perch outside his station’s news room Sept. 16 to lobby for the Who’s appearance. He said he would come down when the group agrees to per form in Milwaukee. Fast food chains over advertising United Press International MIAMI — The judge was not pleased with being kept late in court to deal with a squabble over advertising claims between Burger King and McDonalds on a Friday afternoon. “If both of your slogans had any meaning, we wouldn’t be here in this court,” grumbled U.S. District Judge Eugene P. Spellman at the 4:30 p.m. hear ing. “If ‘I deserved a break’ it certainly would be on Friday afternoon, and if ‘I had it my way’ I wouldn’t be here.” McDonalds is suing in hopes of eventually getting an injunc tion against Burger King televi sion commercials — due to be used for the first time next week — which claim hamburger lov ers prefer its Whoppers over the opposition Big Macs. Spellman did not rule on the injunction. But the judge ordered Miami-based Burger King to argue claims turn over to McDonalds copies of the commercials and results from a nationwide “taste test” the firm says shows most people like the Whopper better. McDonald’s attorney Gary Senner said the commercials are “false and misleading adver tising.” 10 indicted on charges of running ‘slave ring’ United Press International LOS ANGELES — Seven of 10 people accused of running an international slave ring that sold Indonesians to wealthy homeowners looking for cheap domestic, servants were out on bail Saturday. U.S. Magistrate James McMahon set bail Friday at $250,000 for Nasim Mussry of Beverly Hills, and ordered him to surrender his passport. Bail for Moses Aslan of Los Angeles was placed at $100,000. Five other suspects in the servant scheme were ordered to post $10,000 bail. All seven posted the bail and were released. Three of the suspects named in a 52-count federal grand jury indictment Thursday were not in court. Two of them were being held in Jakarta, Indone sia, the FBI said, and the other was expected to surrender soon. The indictment was unsealed Thursday after a 16-month in vestigation into allegations that 50 Indonesians, ranging in age from 18 to 40, were recruited in that country to work in the Un ited States for two to three years with the promise of a beginning salary of $100 a month. They reportedly were given passports, visas, round-trip air line tickets and sometimes money to show immigration officials. But when they arrived in Los Angeles their documents were said to have been taken away to keep them from leaving. The Indonesians, supposedly imported from late 1978 through mid-1981, went to work for some of the defendants or relatives of the defendants, or their services were sold to others who paid $2,000 to $3,000 for each worker to an account in a Jakarta bank, the indictment charged. Also indicted were David Mussry, of Jakarta, Indonesia; his sisters, Elsa Singman, Lily Judah and Hilda Sassoon of Los Angeles; his brothers-in-law, Jack Sassoon and Saul Mizrahie of Los Angeles; his nephew, Elie Mizrahie of Los Angeles and Mordecai Sassoon of Jakarta. David Mussry, reportedly the main operative in Indonesia who recruited workers through his travel agency, and Mordecai Sassoon were being held in Jakarta. Each of the defendants was charged with conspiracy. Some face additional counts of entice ment into slavery, holding peo ple in involuntary servitude and peonage, fraud and misise of visas, and bringing illegal aliens into the United States. If convicted, the defendants face a maximum of five years in prison and fines ranging from $2,000 to $10,000 on each count. 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