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About The Battalion. (College Station, Tex.) 1893-current | View Entire Issue (Oct. 21, 1982)
alion/Page )ber 21,19 national /foreign Battalion/Page 11 October 21, 1982 i r roup sets anti-porn week -l: o o o o o o o United Press International ;■ TUPELO, Miss. — Nearly 200 [religious, political, business and educational leaders have signed tin “Articles of Concern” docu- [nient urging President Reagan (to enforce obscenity laws, it was i announced today. The Rev. Donald E. Wild- ton, head of the National |Federation for Decency, said the document also calls upon the American public to observe Oct. §3 to 30 as Pornography Aware- Mess Week. I Wildrnon said the articles also irge churches to observe Sun- da) as Pornography Aware- less Day, corporations to cease advertising in pornographic publications and retail stores to stop selling pornographic publi cations. In addition, the docu ment calls on video outlets and theaters to refrain from showing and selling pornographic films, television cable systems to re frain from airing pornographic films, and newspapers and other media to refrain from advertis ing “X” rated films. During the week, Wildrnon said, CBN Cable will show a spe cial series on pornography. The programs, Wildrnon said, will be hosted by Carol Lawrence, Pat Boone, Art Linkleter and Pat Robertson. He said the Chicago State ment Foundation will sponsor rallies and newspaper ads in New York, San Francisco, Washington, Houston, Dallas, Oklahoma City and Chicago. “Corporations supporting magazines such as Playboy with advertising funds will be listed in the ads,” Wildrnon said. Additionally, Wildrnon, a Un ited Methodist minister, said the NFD will use the week to begin a monthly “Pornographer Of The Month Award.” He said he will make the first award at a lun cheon-press conference in New York Oct. 29. Wildrnon said that “about 25 major advertisers have already informed him they planned no future advertising in Playboy, Penthouse and other pornog raphic magazines.” jhoto by Octavio a redpot — out of building tl» angerous chemicals ay be sent to Texas ;ays United Press International I NEW ORLEANS Emergency crews have unear thed two additional barrels of Ipotentially dangerous white "phosphorus at the 1984 World’s J'air construction site, only to be told there is no place to dispose of the chemical. The discoveries Tuesday brought to seven the number of phosphorus barrels found at the Site in two weeks. The first five Were burned at a National Guard armory in St. Tammany Parish, but the armory has re fused to burn any more of the substance. If the chemical cannot be burned at the Camp Villere Armory, it may have to be sent to sites in Texas or Alabama for disposal, said Francis Keevers, executive director of the New' Orleans Exhibition Hall Au thority. Construction of the fair’s Louisiana pavilion has been sus pended while emergency crews search for additional drums of phosphorus, which can ignite when exposed to oxygen. Officials have no clue to the source of the barrels, Keever said, because names and dates on the drums eroded long ago. The construction site, on the Mississippi River in downtown New Orleans, previously housed a railroad yard. J SCHULMAN J i THEATRES + $1 off adult ticket ~ 1st Matinee ^ 4c Mon-famlly night Sch-6 ji Tue-famlly night M.E. Ill ^ t SCHULMAN6 J * Jf ■it 2000 E.29-775-2463-775-2468 4c *. ^ Every Thurs-Senior Citizens ^ Shows at 3:30. Price *1.00 and J 4* only Senior Citizens wlk be ad- It 4t mltted. Sch. 6 Only. )$• 4f n J The Best Little J * Whorehouse in * J Texas J 7:15-9:40 * OLD MILWAUKEE 16 gal. Keg $27 75 Price Includes: Ice, Cups & Equipment 846-6635 3611 S. COLLEGE - BRYAN mmtum o o o o o o 0 O * i \ J l X - T I L- it Culpepper Plaza — Next to Godfather’s Pizza ies thereafter. I friends she bui letters Johnson W i because she di granddaughter 'j had been associi?! lan Glass considfl e for the Vie®: rticle said. Pre-election violence, bombs torment Ulster Garp 7:15-9:50 Time Walker 7:10-9:25 STAR TREK II© THE WRATH OF KHAN 7:25-9:50 United Press International • BELFAST, Northern Ireland , J- As voters went to the polls ecame an aiden.^ -Wednesday to elect their first " local assembly in 10 years, army .experts defused a bomb near a ;Protestant party leader’s home. It was a fairly deadly one,” a plice spokesman said, “Anyone M that house would have been oasted alive.” James Molyneaux, the leader bf Ulster’s largest Protestant-led didn't bother to n the pages of Statesman, wii icles himself, ild call up (mana| arlie Green andsatj x on the front lictate something said Glass’ si ise. ing the years oftl Johnson tookaa fair said Johnson e hell of a risk." First ibyterian hurch Creek Parkway, S 823-8073 t Leslie, Pastor dlen, DCE SIDAY: :30AM & lliOOaM 1 io! at 9:30 AM ) s at 9:30 AM TAMU - 9:10 AM -9:15 AM ing at 5:00PM Events £ a 1 i + FI"! , I 1 Presbytcrun u Church 1 S u • u L arty, narrowly escaped death uesday when another bomb, let by leftist guerrillas intent on y chance with hisp 1 labotaging the election, nes at home, thea ploded at the Belfast headquar- :ers of his pro-British Official lentified manfaw Unionist Party. There were no injuries in Tuesday’s blast but police said jthere have been 21 explosions and 12 murders in pre-election violence. A package containing a quan tity of explosives and 2 gallons of gasoline was found on the win dow ledge at the home of Molyneaux’s brother in the vil lage of Crumlin, 12 miles west of Belfast, the police spokesman said. Molyneaux, leader of the Un ionist Party since 1974, lives ab out 100 yards away, the spokes man said. Security officials warned of an impending bomb blitz by the Provisional Irish Republican Army and its Marxist splinter group, the Irish National Liber ation Army, which claimed re sponsibility for Tuesday’s bombing. “Both are in possession of ex plosives and are planning furth er murders,” a police statement said. “It is crucial that persons at risk take the maximum precau tions to ensure their own safety.” Police and army leave was canceled and an estimated 20,000 officers and troops were on the streets in towns and vil lages across the province as vot ing got off to a slow start. At one polling station at a school in the Short Strand dis trict of Belfast, six policemen stood guard — three outside and three inside, one of them holding a submachine gun. The windows of the building were covered with wire grills. Mother X Lode(PG) £ {RreuMtJfeT m; ■fe Manor E. Mall 823-8300 jf. {An Officer and a J 4c Gentleman ? { 7:15-9:50 * * 4c 4c 4c. 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