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About The Battalion. (College Station, Tex.) 1893-current | View Entire Issue (Nov. 23, 1983)
Now is the time to B r ing Mom in to see the large selection of FORMYLS for you special Up and coming event. Lond' short & tea length Present this coupon / 10% off 74e &&tat_So*&qc<e 2305 S. 7exa4 stive. 693-9350 Page 10/The Battalion/Wednesday, November 23,1983 Warped by Scott McCullaJ i riifcky at Arby’s Win a FRE Win a FREE Meal At Our Drive-Thru Window Every 25th customer who orders from our Drive-Thru window can win a FREE Arby’s meal.. .That’s right, you may win your choice of any Arby’s sandwich, regular french fries and medium soft drink. Best of all, you could win any time of day or night (until closing). Just place your order at our drive-thru window and you may be the LUCKY 25 WINNER! If you are our LUCKY 25 WINNER, our Arby’s hostess will announce your free meal... compliments of Arby’s. HURRY, LIMITED TIME OFFER. VISIT ARBY’S DRIVE THRU WINDOW TODAY! hfotcwU' to /ItAys. Aipte MtAvu, poo, Mgs irtal TWO LOCATIONS: Southwest Parkway/College Station/Next to Pelican’s Wharf East 29th Street/Bryan/Across from Bryan High Offer expires December 31,1983 Bomb Package addressed to Reagan seized United Press International NEW YORK — A ticking bomb containing two sticks of dynamite and addressed to Pres ident Reagan was found Mon day in a U.S. Postal Office at Kennedy International Airport, authorities said. “addressed to President Reagan and it was ticking,” said Port Au thority police Lt. Jose Elitjue. l lie building was evacuated. Port Authority police alerted the New York City Police De partment’s bomb Squad. The parcel was discovered in side the post office building ab out 2:30 p.m. by a postal worker. “The device was X-rayed by ihe Police Department bomb Squad and they found two sticks of dynamite in the package,” said Eire Department spokes man Jim Powell. The bomb was removed from the building, and officials wailed for a bomb disposal team from die New York City Police De partment to lake the device to a range in the Bronx. Fire Department Deputy Chief Andrew Kerzner re ported from die scene he was keeping all Fire Department un its on die scene until the[ bomb disposal van arrivedanjl the bomb was placed safelyjj| the van, Powell said. Three engine companies anil two hook and ladders ««(| standing by, Powell said. Elique said die package»al described to him as a nornJ parcel, wrapped in regubi| brown paper. Oil spill threatens pelicans United Press International NEWPORT, Ore. — A 350- foot freighter, broken into three pieces on a coastal rock jetty, spread oil over a 3-mile stretch of beach Monday, killing a num ber of birds. Volunteers tried desperately to save endangered California brown pelicans and dozens of other birds blackened by the crude. The Coast Guard Marine Safety Office in Portland said if more of the fuel tanks contain ing the oil ruptured, the situa tion had “the potential for being a major spill.” A marine biologist said the birds “looked like somebody had dropped them in a barrel of tar.” A number of birds had died and a seal also was found coveretl with globs of oil, he said. At least Hi terrified pelicans soaked with oil were being kept alive by injections of food and other solutions administered by teams of volunteer wildlife workers. Cleanup crews used contain ment booms to attack the spill into Yaquina Bay from the Panamanian-registered Blue Magpie, which slammed into the north jetty in heavy seas late Saturday and broke up. Oil had floated 4 miles up the Yaquina River, authorities said. Another storm was expected within two days, environmental ists were warned. Nineteen South Korean crew men aboard the vessel were res cued by Coast Guard helicopters from the deck, all unhurt. The ship could have been car rying up to 75,000 gallons of oil, but Coast Guard officials were not sure how much oil was still in the vessel when it readied the mouth of the bay. out of the storm, (iiiar(l| logs showed. The ship was owned by; | apanese corporation, rejl islcred in Panama and charlertdl to a Danish corporation, oHiciali| said. I he Blue Magpie's captain, identified as Kim Gap Bong, was repeatedly warned of the dan ger of trying to enter the harbor through 15-foot seas, the Coast , Guard said. The captain replied that oil had floated up theb several times that he had to gel By late Sund.n. ollkiak«| mated it had leaked at leasi| 3.000 gallons and dial at h 200 gallons had reached shod The midship section ofilitj wrec ked ship was under water the bow was stuck on the uxbl and the stern was “bobbing around.” the coast guard said Newport officials reported| quina River about foul miles. Accused Nazi uses his house to meet bond in latest trial United Press International CLEVELAND — Accused Nazi death camp guard John Demjanjuk, whom Israeli au thorities are attempting to extra- dite and try on war crimes charges, stayed out of jail by us ing Ids house to post $50,000 bond Monday. Demjanjuk, who has been stripped of bis U.S. citizenship, did not appear in court, but his attorneys handed over the deed. He still lives in his $60,000, sub urban Cleveland house with his wife and three children. U.S. District Magistrate David Perelman had ordered Demjanjuk, 63, a retired auto worker, to surrender to author ities or post bond by Monday afternoon. “Now we’re seeing the ridicu lous theatrics of having to put up his home for ransom,” said de fense attorney Mark O’Connor. Federal marshals said they arrested Demjanjuk Friday at the request ot Israeli of ficials. In freeing Demjanjuk, Perelman said he probably would not flee before Monday because he had been free during his denaturali zation trial and deportation pro ceedings but remained in Cleve land. . Israel’s request for Demjan- juk’s extradition marks the first time it has appealed to the Un ited Stales to turn over an ac cused Nazi war criminal. An ex tradition hearing is scheduled for January. Adolf Eichmann was taken from Argentina to be tried in Israel for war crimes, and was executed in 1962. The U.S. government alleged Demjanjuk was “Ivan the Terri ble,” a sadistic guard who oper ated the gas chamber at the Treblinka death camp in Po- ATTENTION AGGIES! N£ed a place to rent for your sorority or private, parties? Sons of Hermman Lodge is the place. For additional information call: Don Roberts land, where 900,00tfj|l perished during World Wad l s District Judgc FraniJ Ballisli stripped DentjanjikM his citizenship after a hve-w«l| trial in 1 9S 1. . . , . O’Connor said he willasklkl court to provide protection oj Demjanjuk because'lie lean client will he kidnappedork In foreign forces. Bit| knew of no specific plots agai | Demjanjuk. ... I O’Connor said he will pro I at the extradition healing „ 1 key government dociunenin | in Demjanjuk's denatuia 1/an 1 hearing was forged by I he defense will show l “witnesses lied about Ivan | Terrible. There never wa a»| Ivan the Terrible,” * sanl Ballisli, who heard tesUM from survivors ol the I lllllJ , | J ruled Demjanjuk hec on | citizenship papers by conce his Nazi past. c -n m m c y ■ Ivan m Survivors said they recojj 822-4238 * * WE SUPPORT THE AGGIES” i i!|! Jt rr > Scamardo, President of Unitedbank, and ||i; ^.' n< ^ a Teague, New Accounts E xec J J ^ ve ; 1 ar » pleased to present three Aggies 2 footba tickets and 2 locker room passes each. T ® drawing included all new Aggies that °P er ^.. an account at Unitedbank to start the ha semester Winners are: Tammera Millet t e SMU game, Daniel D. Kainer, Jr. the Hous ton game, and Adela Rico the Texas game- Preferred Overdraft Protection Unitedbank College Station, n.a. MtWBE* FDK Culpepper Plua »t 1501 Texu Avenue nollepe Station Texas • 693-1414 PI CU E HOURS: Cobby: Mcn-Thurs 9-4, Fri 9-6. Sat 9-12 Drive In. Mon-Fri 7-7 3. ; '<-5 NPACT 24 HOUR TELLER SERVICE Nik Bry mui Gif gar V f< u UR( aulhoi has pit perjur to two ing fal Count Be waivec a prel ding a worki becau “Ij alter an ac once ; more mzeci Demjanjuk as Terrible” from photograph an SS identification can a S to be bis, and from a fbl ■ | photograph. iui Demjanjuk rnaintm'W J was captured by the Cein < the Crimea, held at a 1 ‘ . and then placed ina umlohM Ukrainian National Armyorj] nized by the Germans t () the Soviets. P b