Call Battalion Classified 845-2611 CHIMNEY HILL BOWLING CENTER 40 LANES League & Open Bowling Family Entertainment Bar & Snack Bar Page 10/The Battalion/Wednesday, December 4,1985 701 University Dr E. 260-9184 HEW LOOK THE SHAPE OF THINGS! Hair Styling Salon for Men and Wonien Perm Special ? a Cut Include N€lUS Coupon Good Until Dec. 14,1985 4417 Texas Ave. South 84.6-7614 (next to Fajita Rita’s) ■= 5ridal B^utioue Register with this coupon to WUV 25% any regularly priced gown pm-chased at our new store. at Park Place Plaza discount good through June '86 Drawing Dec. 14,1985 Address 2501 Texas at Southwest Pkwy Name- across from Ft Shiloh 693 ‘ 9358 f NEED CASH? We offer premium dollars on used Books... sfloupotWi Check on our Trade Policy I — i and Save 20% More. FREE Parking Behind the Store J STANLEY STEEMER ! CARPET CLEANER TAX $18 Per Room 2 Room Minimum 696-3100 Residential only Must present coupon The Boot Barn JUSTIN ROPERS $79 00 Largest Selection Lowest Price in The Brazos Valley 2.5 Miles East of Brazos Center on FM 1179 (Briarcest Dr.) Mon.-Sat 9:30-6:00 776-2895 cHQhxcxy Restaurant & Bar Everyday Happy Hour 11-7 FREE Taco Bar 4-7 Chips, queso Salsa, Taco Fixins Free, Free, Free World and Nation Bishops synod Canadians call for stand on nuclear war Associated Press VATICAN CITY — Canadian bishops Tuesday urged an interna tional assembly of bishops to take a stand on the threat of nuclear war and Third World debt, calling the is sues two of “the most urgent prob lems of our time.” U.S. bishops attending the two- week synod promptly supported the Canadian initiative. “The future of the world hangs precariously on these two issues,” Bishop Bernard Hubert of Saint Jean-Longueuil, Quebec, president of the Canadian Bishops Confer ence, said in a written statement. The statement said the synod should issue a message that affirms “the determination of Christians to take part in building a better world by confronting two of the most ur gent problems of our time ...” Hubert, who made the proposal on behalf of more than 160 Ca nadian bishops, later said, “The synod should convey a word of hope to the world, and we can do so by ex pressing our shared preoccupation over these two issues.” Bishop James W. Malone of Youngstown, Ohio, said he agreed it was “appropriate for the synod of bishops to express its concern about these issues.” Young said, “Both are matters of great importance to the bishops of the United States as expressed in their 1983 collective pastoral letter on peace and in the pastoral letter on economic justice now scheduled “The future of the world hangs precariously on these two issues. ” — Bishop Bernard Hu bert of Quebec for completion in November 1986.” The 1983 document condemned first-strike usage of nuclear weapons and demanded a halt to the growth of superpower arsenals. A draft of the 1986 pastoral letter says U.S. foreign assistance should be geared to meet basic human needs and promote social and eco- Pr< nomic development rather than se curity interests alone. Pope John Paul II convened the 165-member extraordinary synod to assess the impact of the. 1962-65 Sec ond Vatican Council, which fash ioned far-reaching reforms in lit urgy, ecumenism, church government and seminary educa tion. Hubert suggested that the bish ops’ concern on the two issues lx* re flected in a pastoral message that will be issued at the end of the synod. The pope has repeatedly called on the world community to work out measures to alleviate the “crushing debt burden” on Third World coun tries. He also has condemned the nu clear arms race, often warning of the dangers of “a nuclear holocaust.” Before the Geneva arms limita tion talks resumed earlier this year, the pope called on the United States and the Soviet Union to renounce “egoistic and ideological interests" for the success of their negotiations. Hubert said in his statement the positions taken by the pontiff over the years on major social, economic and political questions “have en hanced the credibility of the church and (provided) a better understand ing of what Christian life is all about. “A more precise perception of reality should encourage Christian communities to continue their serv ice of humankind,” the statement said. The synod has no power to set policy but is strictly an advisory body. 50,000 mourners fill stadium for funeral of 12 slain blacks Associated Press South Africa — MAMELODI, Their arms raised in clenched-fist salutes, up to 50,000 mourners jammed a soccer stadium Tuesday for the funeral of 12 blacks killed in one of the bloodiest days in 15 months of rioting. In Pretoria, President P.W. Botha announced that he was lifting the 19-week-old state of emergency in eight of 38 districts. He declared in a statement, “The revolutionary cli mate is fast losing momentum.” The five-hour funeral and burial service in Pretoria’s Mamelodi town ship began and ended peacefully. After talks with organizers, police had agreed to keep out of sight at Mamelodi and to lift riot funeral re strictions, including a limit of 50 mourners. Diplomats from 11 countries, in cluding U.S. Embassy political coun selor T im Carney, attended. Winnie Mandela, wife of jailed black leader Nelson Mandela, defied her banning order to be at the sta dium. Jo a standing ovation and freedom chants, she told the throng, “The blood of our heroes will be avenged . . . We are here today to tell you that the day when we shall lead you to freedom is not far away.” Mrs. Mandela’s eight-year-old banning order bars her From attend ing gatherings and restricts her to the small town of Brandfort. The flag of the outlawed African National Congress guerrilla movement was draped over the dozen coffins in Pitjie Stadium, in cluding those of Magdalene Mlombo, a 69-year-old woman shot to death by police, and Trocia Nd- lovu, a two-month-old girl who died from inhaling tear gas. Nelson Mandela was head of the armed wing of the African National Congress when he was sentenced to life in prison in 1964 for plotting sabotage to overthrow white rule. fire Residents said police opened without provocation on a vast crowd of at least 50,000 protesters who f athered Nov. 21 outside Mamelo- i’s town hall to protest funeral re strictions, rent hikes and use of sol diers on riot patrols. Police said they had been forced to battle “partic ularly violent mobs” in the township throughout that day. At the time, police said 13 people were killed, not counting the infant who died later. White opposition legislators joined black activists in demanding a full government inquiry. Police manned roadblocks at township entrances but allowed free access for television crews and jour nalists. Mamelodi is outside the emergency zone and not covered by one-month-old rules limiting cover age of unrest. Associated Press •i*. : :j: ; 990 Margaritas £;;; 1.00 Coronas 750 Draft 1.00 off Bardrinks Daily Specials Mon-Fajitas, Chicken or Beef $5.45 iil^Tues.-Enchilada Dinner $3.75 i^Wed.-Free regular nachos with purchase of 2 dinners ^ ft ^Th 11-10 Togo orders 3^^ Brya Jj ' 1 823-7470 infrontofWalmart:^: • x : ’.-xi'.-t-x.-x".-ft". The upper Midwest dug out Tuesday from the season’s first big snowstorm, with Minneapolis towing hundreds of cars from snow routes, and cold air made its seasonal migra tion into the Southeast while warm, wet air melted snow in the North west. Off California, the Coast Guard rescued crews of boats caught in 20- foot waves that made a Coast Guard surfboat turn over. The list of record lows that started in October got longer Tuesday as In ternational Falls, Minn., chipped four degrees off its former mark with a low of 27 degrees below zero, and Tower in northeastern Minne sota hit 33 below. While relatively warm rain melted Seattle’s snow and ice, Yakima, Wash., posted a record low of 1 below zero, and other parts of the Northwest got wet snow. The Midwest storm was blamed for at least 26 deaths since Friday, and more than a week of stormy weather in the Northwest contrib uted to 29 deaths. Minnesota spent an estimated $1.8 million to plow snow from Fri day through Monday, said Curtis Christie, maintenance engineer with the state Department of Transporta tion. Western Maryland got its first snowfall of the year, state police re ported, and temperatures dropped below freezing in parts of Tennes see, with a low of 24 at Nashville, and elsewhere in the Southeast. Off San Francisco, the Coast Guard rescued six people Tuesday from an overturned sailboat, but a Copy quality so goot you can’t tell it’s a copy Cioan. clear, crisp copies fromogi | r.-w Kodak copier-duplicitm. ;■ Plenty of free parking, fastservici j T ,y us ’oday! U.S.- tofi Assc CASH for gold, silver, old coins, diamonds Full Jewelry Repair Large Stock of Diamonds Gold Chains :■ WASHING viet positions TEXAS COIN EXCHANGE 404 University Dr. 846-8916 3202-A Texas Ave. (across from El Chico,Bryan) 779-7662 THEATRE GUIDE Senior Citizens Anytiim 2 75 Mon-Fri Matinees First show except Holiiijt hardened Geneva sunun say, making it a compromise way for a co arms control a i Moscow is promised lurt iaiest arms cor ing closer to t the administn Wars researc known as the native. Kf Space-haser Strategic anc missiles, are U Soviet arms o to resume in ( H A member < Ration said l Soviet leader ’ gaged in "a di Mar Wars in conceding am point of view. Reagan strt Post Oak Mall IN THE MALI Wtl 31 Notork HUM StevCN SPfafl€flG Presents EttUUfet Jjwruu Worn no MICHfla ) KM 1 w 7:45-9:55 Starts Friday White Night* ^Mia 1st Show Sat. 4 Su KORA Famiif Nit* K7AM Family Nit« Ar*a students will I CHICAGt Chicago’s mt First Amend an organized ons. ■ Correctioi Crucial to the 1 They say t cover gang i within prisor I “If the inn said Illinois Would guara Illinois priso I The El Ru Siam and i! incarcerated i| They folk. Sunni Islami said leader A 1 The E1 R tional right i the same rig Corrections ■ “A group the El Rukn are tradition C93-2457 226 SVIPKl SHOWTIMES FOR TODAYONU Carney said it was the first time a U.S. diplomat attended a political funeral in South Africa. DAY OF THE DEAD nm TO LIVE & DIE IN tA (R) Tt STUB Midwest digging out of snowstorm TARGET (R) 1M ■wd'.i.hi™™ INTR 775-2463 2002 E.® SHOWTIMES FOR TODAYONlt seventti was missing. Another sail boat was abandoned Monday after its crew was rescued, and a Coast Guard surfboat sent to its aid was rolled completely over, as it is de signed to do in heavy seas. In the Northwest, rising tempera tures turned intersections into ponds in southern Idaho as snow melted, and wet, heavy snow col lapsed scores of patio and carport roofs. Boise had more than a foot of snow Monday but was down to just 4 inches Tuesday morning. Most of the weather-related deaths were due to traffic accidents and heart attacks while shoveling snow. The Midwest storm was blamed for 11 deaths in Minnesota, seven in Iowa, four in Wisconsin, two in Michigan and one each in In diana and Illinois. KRUSH GROOVE AFTER HOURS A NIGHTMARE ON ELM STREET-2 ( THE RETURN OF THE SOLDIER KISS OF THE SPIDER WOMAN (R) GRUNT (R) STUB BURS met p.n mc r MANOR EAST I 823-8300 Manor Easlh! SHOWTIMES FOR TODAY ONI’ THE JOURNEY OF .NATTY GANN (PG) tm .SANTA CLAUSE THE MOVIE (PG) STARCHASER (PG) 7:2M« TAMl nt’); MSC Camera Committee Bonfire Print Sale The "official" bonfire print SIZE 8x10 8x10 11x14 16x20 PRICE $4.00 $5.25 $10.50 $21.00 presale order Pre-Sale - Nov. 18-22 & 25-27 10 a.m.-2 p.m. Post Sale - Nov. 28 12:00-6:00 p.m. (game day) Dec. 2-6 10a.m.-2 p.m. All sales at MSC 1st Floor Tables "Remember Bonfire '85 with a picture" soci mt Bic mt *