Garage Sale WHEN: Saturday, September 21 9 a.m. - 4 p.m. WHERE: The Wesley Foundation 201 Tauber (behind Pizza Hut at Northgate) WHAT: Furniture, Games, Books, Clothes, Luggage, Sports Equipment, and Lots of other good items!11 THE ATTIC. Antiques 20% off* All furniture, glassware & collectables! * must present ad for discount * excluding sale items 118 S. Bryan Bryan TX, 77801 Bud (’74) & Betty Sparks (409) 822-7830 Good thru Sept. 30, 1985 jues -Sat ^ ^ ^ ^ 10:30-5:30 fvW M | Battalion Classified 845-2611 Page 16/The Battalion/Friday, September 20, 1985 Labor leaders get arrested Siege declared in Bolivia Associated Press LA PAZ, Bolivia — The govern ment declared a state of siege Thurs day and arrested labor leaders who refused to end a 16-day-old general strike against a wage freeze intended to fight inflation of 14,000 percent. President Victor Paz Estenssoro’s conservative government told tens of thousands of strikers they would be fired unless they returned to work, but many stayed home. Riot police raided the Congress building, five union halls, a radio station, San Andres University and the state mining company offices in La Paz during the night, according to union activists who escaped. The Interior Ministry said 150 la bor activists, including the 18 exec utive committee members of the Bo livian Workers Central, the leftist national labor federation, were sent into internal exile. Soldiers raided a textile factory in La Paz and fired on striking workers who had beaten up four policemen, witnesses said. They said two strikers were wounded by the police gunfire. The strike leaders had begun a hunger strike Tuesday against the government austerity program and were camped on blankets in union halls or workplaces. Reporters later saw Juan Lechin, 72, the labor federation’s founder and executive secretary, put into a car by policemen at the Interior Ministry and driven away. A privately owned television sta tion broadcast an interview later with Edgardo Vasquez, who identi fied himself as clandestine leader of the labor federation and urged workers to continue the strike. Paz Estenssoro declared a 90-day state of siege throughout the coun try, empowering police to hold peo ple without charge for 48 hours or move them to internal exile in re mote areas. Paz Estenssoro’s decree said the siege was required “to save Bolivia from the scourge of hyperinflation that has endangered its very exis tence.” “A political minority entrenched in union leadership posts, while pro moting an illegal strike, is trying to subvert the authority of the state,” it said. World Bank: Developing nations get hurt by protectionist sentiment Associated Press WASHINGTON — The eco nomic plight of many developing countries eased somewhat last year, but a growing tide of protectionist sentiment threatens to reverse the small gains, the World Bank said Thursday. “By the dismal standards of the early 1980s, 1984 was a good year for developing countries,” said the bank. The World Bank said the threat of protectionist measures in the United States and other industrial countries was a “major concern” since developing countries critically need export sales to pay off their debt burdens and promote further economic growth. The bank’s annual report said economic growth in developing countries averaged 3.8 percent last year, up substantially from the 2.1 percent growth rates in both 1982 and 1983. Many African nations, hit by drought and famine, suffered further declines in economic activity last year while Latin American na tions, seeking to cope with severe debt problems, enjoyed a major turnaround. Growth in Latin American coun tries averaged 2.8 percent last year following two years of decline, al though tne report noted that this ad vance barely kept ahead of the in crease in population. “The United States has provided the main stimulus to the global re covery,” the bank said. If Elizabeth Barrett and Robert Browning had Al&rs 60% and 40% discounts, it would have been a terrible loss for English literature. And of course, she wouldn't have had to restrict her feelings to a mere sonnet's length, either. After all, you can always think of one more way to tell someone you love them when you're on the phone. Let us count the ways you can save. 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A-1 LOCK & CYCLE ) Parts*accessories Repairs all makes 3811 E 29th Bryan Town & Country Center 260-9810 © 1985 AT&T Communications The Battalion WeeKiy ss/lQga£ine