m NEW LOOK SHAPE OF THINGS PERM SPECIAL $22.50 cut included Phone 846-7614 4417 Texas Ave. South SHOE by Jeff MacNelly Parkway Medical Clinic 20% Discount to A&NLStudents & Faculty 8 a.m. to 8 p.m. Mon.-Sat. 8 a.m. to 6 p.m. Sunday Parkway Shopping Center-next to Kroger's & TG&Y 693-0202 I WANT ID 60 SDMkWWERE ™ WARM THAT2 NOT TCO PAR OFF WHERE X CAN HAVE A NICEtfUiET VACATION NAV^OO KNOW, (SET EOME SANP IN NW ^HDE9... 9UT I'VE SOT A REAL LIMITEP BUP3ET.. WELL, TAKE A SIX-PACK HDME, TURN UIE 7HERMOETAT WAV Up ANP ^TANP IN THE KITTV ROY. LsTanFl // wgggjji zik J«M#(kon Comfr>unic*iion» Inc VM9^ Dj»tMDol*0 Pv TnOun» S«*» Solidarity organizes work strike Associated Press MSC Camera Committee 1st General Meeting February 4 7:00-8:30 Room 601 Rudder Featuring: Imaginative use of filters. U.N. leader discusses release of Vietnam MIAs Associated Press HANOI, Vietnam —Javier Perez de Cuellar, the U.N. secretary-gen eral, Wednesday said progress had been made during talks with Viet namese leaders toward resolving questions about more than 2,500 Americans missing in action in the Vietnam War. Perez de Cuellar said at a news conference that he brought up the subject of the missing Americans at the request of the U.S. government, which is demanding a full account ing of MIAs as a condition for re storing diplomatic ties with Vietnam. The U.N. chief was on a two-day visit to Hanoi, the Vietnamese capi tal. “I was very pleased to find very good receptivity from the Vietnam ese and I will pass this on to the American authorities,” Perez de Cuellar said. Foreign Minister Nguyen Co Thach, who appeared witn the U.N. chief at the news conference, said: “I can have no clearer answer than that. ... It is a humanitarian issue and we don’t have any conditions.” Perez de Cuellar said he and Thach also discussed the United States’ offer to accept some 10,000 Vietnamese interned in “re-educa tion camps” since 1975, but the U.N. official declined to describe Thach’s reaction. Perez de Cuellar also met with Premier Pham Van Dong. Thach said he welcomed a U.S. role in making peace in Southeast Asia. “If they can make war here, they can easily make peace,” he said. FIND OUT ABOUT 1985-1986 Leadership Opportunities in the MEMORIAL Antibody found to destroy AIDS virus IK STUDENT CENTER at an Informational! Meeting Monday, February 4,1985 7:00 p.m. 607 Rudder Make an opportunity Make friends Make a difference through your MSC Associated Press NEWPORT BEACH, Calif. —Sci entists have for the first time identi fied an antibody that inactivates the AIDS virus in laboratory experi ments, a step toward development of an AIDS vaccine, a researcher said Thursday. The discovery “does not prove you’re going to be successful in find ing a vaccine,” said Dr. Robert Gallo of the National Cancer Institute, who headed one of two teams that announced discovery of the likely AIDS virus last April. Asked if he believes an anti-AIDS vaccine can be developed, Gallo re plied: “I am hopeful ... but it’s really hard to say when.” Considerable research must be done to determine whether the anti body will destroy the virus in the hu man body as effectively as it destroys it in the laboratory. Gallo described the discovery while talking to reporters attending a scientific conference in Newport Beach sponsored by the City of Hope National Medical Center. He said the discovery, made only re cently, has not yet been reported in a scientific journal. The so-called “neutralizing anti body” was identified by Dr. Marjorie Robert-Guroff in Gallo’s laboratory and independently by Dr. Martin Hirsch at Massachusetts General Hospital, Gallo said. Reached in Boston, Hirsch con firmed the discovery, but declined further comment, except to say his findings soon will be published in a letter to the editor of a medical jour nal — which he declined to identify — and will be presented in April during an AIDS conference in At lanta. Gallo said the antibody knocks out THE HEAT IS ON. IT'S ON THE STREET. THE WORD IS OUT. NOW'S V0UR CHANCE TO BUV THE BEST CONDO IN TOWN. CRIPPLE CREEK CONDOMINIUMS. THE NEXT BEST THINS TO BEVERLV HILLS. P00L/TENN1S COURTS/HOT TUB./ MICROWAVE OVENS/ !{ CEILING FANS BU-ZjlPTP CONDOMINIUMS 904 UNIVERSITY OAKS COLLEGE STATION, TX 77840 764-8682 764-0504 Whether you’re on the bridge of a 200-million-dollar Navy destroyer, an officer on a nuclear sub, or piloting a Navy f-14 Tomcat, you’ll be in charge. And moving up fast; At 22, you’ll be well on your way in a career that provides the kind of excitement, responsibility and satisfaction you’ve always dretimed of And as a Navy officer, you’ll be in a position of decision making authority. With expert management and technical training behind you to help you get the job done right. The rewards.are l ight, too. An excellent starting salary with a chance to earn up to as much as $dd,B0() after four years with reg ular promotions and increases. Even more with bonuses. After four years of college, you’ll lie on your way. (let there fast in the Navy. See your Navy recruiter or call 800-327-NAVY. NAVY OFFICERS GET RESPONSIBILITY FAST. WARSAW, Boland — Solidarity founder Lech Walesa and the out lawed union movement’s under ground leadership have called fora nationwide, 15-minute work stop page on Feb. 28 to protest govern ment plans to raise food prices. The call came in a joint statement by Walesa and the Solidarity Tern porary Coordinating Commission known by its Polish initialsTKK. The call was circulated to Western | correspondents in Warsaw Wednesday. It is believed to be the first titnel Walesa has joined a strike call since before martial law was imposed and Solidarity was suspended in Decern her 1981. State-run television reported inal related development that investiga tions were under way against Adam Michnik, a prominent dissident, and I Bogdan Lis, a former senior under [ ground leader. They are thought to have takerj part in “a conspiratorial meeting of I the so-called Femporary Coordinai ing Commission of Solidarity" on I Jan.21. The report cited two articles! the penal code banning participation! in an illegal organization. The two men could get up three years in prison if chargedandj convicted. the ability of the AIDS virus to infec| cells. AIDS, or acquired immune defy ciencv syndrome, is marked by the inability of the body’s immune svsl tern to resist disease. Homosexuals, Haitians, abusers I of injectable drugs and hemophiliac are most likely to get AIDS, which is | apparently spread by sexual contact i contaminated needles and blood transfusions, hut not by casual con tact.