The Battalion. (College Station, Tex.) 1893-current, September 04, 1985, Image 10
KLIPSCH! Page 10/The Battalion/Wednesday September 4,1985 AGGIES... GET THE WHOLE PICTURE When you subscribe to N\QO.esN Cablevision you get 24 hour-a-day entertainment, first run movies, sports specials, up-to-the-minute news and more, for as little as 454 a day. Sign up now at one of these two satellite locations! Woodstone Shopping Center Memorial Student Center «.• *• %N . . V. <• •• . s ^ N v. S ^ s ».w. . V ^ . . - Several South African ri erupt on violent anniversary 913 Harvey Road, College Station 7 days a week 9 AM - 6 PM Texas A&M University Monday-Friday, 8 AM-5 PM Aug. 19-Sept. 6 Important! If you live in an apartment you must bring a copy of your lease in order for us to properly install your service. Thank you! Subscribe now for your free gift! • Sign up for the Movie Channel and get an AM-FM radio with earphones.^ • Sign up for Cinemax and get a painter's cap. Offer valid only at the two locations listed above Quantities are limited Associated Press JOHANNESBURG, South Africa —Students abandoned black schools near Johannesburg and rioted around Cape Town on Tuesday, one year after bloody rent protests set off a tide of violence against white rule that has cost more than 650 lives. Police and troops sealed off eight black townships, including the two in which the rent protests began Sept. 3, 1984. The black National Union of Min- eworkers said Tuesday night it had “suspended” a two-day-old pay strike against selected gold and coal mines after a gold mine fired 5,000 of its 7,000 workers. Gold Fields of South Africa said earlier that it was “processing” the workers dismissed from its Deelkraal mine, west of Johannesburg. Mine guards and police fired tear gas to drive strikers away from a heavily guarded dormitory block, where management said 1,400 miners who wanted to work took shelter. The strike appeared to be crum bling through the day. Manage ments said only two gold mines re mained struck, Deelkraal and the General Mining Corp. operation at Marievale. In announcing the suspension, the union said it was seeking a court injunction to stop management from sending dismissed miners back to impoverished l lack homelands. It said Marievale already had sent 300 miners home. There was no immedi ate comment from the mine man agement. A black man was shot to death Tuesday in the black Eastern Cape township of Duncan Village, near East London, when police fired on a crowd during a gasoline bomb attack on a police vehicle, national police headquarters in Pretoria reported. It also said students demonstrat ing at the University of the North, in the Lebowa tribal homeland, went “on the rampage.” One student was seriously wounded and five were ar rested, it said. In the huge black city of Soweto, which houses 1.5 million people out side Johannesburg, thousands of high school students left classes and roamed the streets. Residents said the anniversary walkout spread rap idly in a mixture of spontaneity and coercion by militant students. South Af rica’s currency, the rand, traded at 41.50 cents against the dol lar late Tuesday, down from 44.95 Monday despite strong suppon from the central bank. The bank has intervened sintt foreign exchange and stock markets reopened Monday after a five-dai suspension. The suspension was or dered last Tuesday when the rand plunged to a record low of 34.811 cents. The mine strike was to have in volved 60,000 miners at five and two coal mines. Union leaders said 28,000 men walked out Mon day, but management said the total was fewer than half that. South Africa’s military corn mander, Gen. Gonstand Viljoen said 45 white conscripts wereai without leave from a parachute bar- talion. He said in a statement thatnc army could “tolerate the ciTci® stances” of the disappearances fron the Bloemf ontein base, but gave nr other details. Syncom 3 repaired Shuttle returns triumphan NAKAMICHlI IALPINEI Associated Press EDWARDS AIR FORCE BASE, Calif. —Space shuttle Discovery’s tri umphant astronauts landed safely by dawn’s early light Tuesday, complet ing a “near-perfect” repair mission in space that revived a lifeless $85 million satellite. Discovery dropped out of a brightening sunrise sky and mission commander Joe Engle and pilot Dick Covey guided the 100-ton craft to a flawless landing down the cen terline on the dry lakebed runway, ending a week-long, 2.9 million-mile voyage. “Eddie (Edwards) looks beauti ful,” said Engle, a former test pilot who once flew airplanes at the desert test flight center. “Welcome home, Joe, and con gratulations to the whole crew,” said Mission Control. [CARVER Jesse Moore, director of NASA’s space shuttle program, said he was delighted with the mission that in cluded the “jump start” salvage of the Syncom 3 satellite and the suc cessful launch of three other satel lites. If Syncom 3 works when it is fired toward a higher orbit next month, it will become the first commercial sa tellite salvaged in space. “I have to characterize this as a near-perfect mission,” said Moore at a post-landing news conference. "It clearly demonstrated the value of people in space.” During the week-long mission, the astronauts launched three satellites for commercial customers and then stalked and captured the crippled Syncom 3. Syncom 3 was launched from the shuttle last April, but failed to turn itself on. Astronauts on that flight tempted to activate it by brushing switch with improvised fly-swatte like snares. The switch moved, be the satellite remained lifeless Astronauts James “Ox" van He ten and Bill Fisher, in two weekea: spacewalks, muscled it onto Disce ery’s robot arm. They then instalkt an electronics box and a wiring hi’ i ness to bypass the failed elect circuit. Van Hoften launched the I'/riu satellite, heaving like a weighdifir to give it a stabilizing spin of abo; three revolutions per minute as floated away. Engineers at Hughes Commi nications Inc., owner of the Synctm reported its batteries and liquidi eled rocket engines seem unda maged, despite four inactive momlt in tne supercold of space. Yamaha CD-X2 Quality Savings From YAMAHA PREPARE FOR: Yamaha GE-3 Compact Disc Player 3-Beam Laser Music Search Programmable was $400.00 Now Only $299.00 Yamaha System #1 R3T35 Watt per Channel Dig ital Receiver P220 Semi-Auto Turntable K220 Soft Touch Dolby B&C Cassette NS10T 2-Way Speakers Top Quality Car Stereo & Video Graphic Equalizer 10 Band Dual Channel Compen sates for room acoustics was $200.00 Now Only $1 49.00 EDUCATION AL CENTER LTD. TEST PREPARATION SPECIALISTS SINCE 1938 Call Days, Eves & Weekends You don’t have to go to Houston to prepare. Call 696-3196 for details. 707 Texas Ave. 301-C In Dallas: 11617 N. Central Expwy. 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