NEED CASH? We offer premium dollars on used Books... Page 10/The Battalion/Thursday, December 5,1985 TLOUPOTWl Check on our Trade Policy —^TT»T»TTT^??»TT^—i I and Save 20% Mor © FREE Parking Behind the Store CHEVY STARTS DAN CHASE tarlUZiVi AYKROYD Warner Bros. iw,m,a landis/folseyT?' /m An A.A.R.-BERNIE BR1LLSTEIN - BRIAN GRAZER iwuckw CHEVY CHASE DAN AYKROYD • "SPIES LIKE US” SIEVE FORREST • DONNA DIXON • BRUCE DAVISON BERNiE CASEY-WILLIAM PRINCE • TOM HATTEN NteieBv ELMER BERNSFEIN bv. u , w BERNIE BR1LLSTE1N • Sccwitphv bv DAN AYKROYD LOWELL GANZ & BABALOO MANDEL Sik*v h DAN AYKROYD & DAVE THOMAS F-vWt-y BRIAN GRAZER aNGEORGE FOLSEY. JR. ttrc^^JOHN LANDIS from warni r imos. ■ * wakvi h c.«.>M.vr nr aT *»*#»&*»* [ptipawnTMcuwmsuoasiia -gi-j ’VoZh' » ~iV m'iifiaint ^ Post Oak 3 irt the Mall itt") Friday 7:80/9:40/11:40 Saturday 1:00/3:05/5:15/7:30/9:40/11:40 I.MIKlKItAV Join us Thursday nights for FROZEN STRAWBERRY MARGARITAS! Only $1.50 from 9:00 pm until closing Tho INTERURBAN 505 University Dr. "an aggie tradition" Uppimm Music Co.’s GRAND OPENING SALE SUIK., Dec. 8, Noon - 8 — Live music from 6 local bands — Register to win a free guitar FREE BEER Savings of up to 30% jStorewide • Marshall Amplifiers from 0199 • Dean Markley Amps from 099 00 00 Open Mon. - Sat., 10 - 6 Culpepper Plaza 696-1379 A Feast W* At The Hilton Lord and Lady Raleigh will throw open the castle gates Dec. 4-7 for a Yuletide feast in the splendor of renaissance England. MSC Madrigal Dinners presents jugglers, wen ches, madrigal singers and a hearty meal to put you in the holiday spirit. And should a touch of the devil get into you-you may pur chase wine from the lord’s private stock. Tickets are available at the Ticketron outlets in Dillard’s and Rudder Tower. Tickets are $18 for the public and $14 for senior citizens and A&M students. Call 845-1234 for more information. Overflowing With Good Cheer December 4-7 Vietnam turns over remains of 7 missing U.S. servicemen Filipino rebels free American Associated Press HANOI. Vietnam — U.S. servicemen stood at atten tion under a hot sun Wednesday and saluted as com rades carried seven small wooden crates that Vietnam said contain the remains of Americans killed in the war that ended a decade ago. A folded American flag was atop each of the crates, which were put aboard a C-141 transport plane at Ha noi’s Noi Bai airport for the Ilight to Honolulu. T he re mains will be analyzed at the U.S. Joint Casually Resolu tion Center there. Vietnamese officials delivered the remains three days after completion of an unprecedented joint excavation at the spot where an American B-52 crashed during a bombing raid over what then was North Vietnam. In a snort, simple airport ceremony, the Vietnamese also handed over to the U.S. military delegation “material evidence” of 14 other American servicemen, including identification tags. Officials on both sides said they hoped the excavation and return of remains marked the beginning of much greater cooperation in accounting for tlie 1,797 Ameri cans still listed as missing in action in Vietnam. Ngo Hoang, a Foreign Ministry official, said the re mains in the seven crates were found around Hanoi and the nearby port of Haiphong. MAN I LA, Philippines-M# lem secessionist rebels Wefc dav released an American am German they had held hostaji the wilderness of the souti Philippines for more than am the' l S. Embassy said. A brief embassy statements/ |uhn Robinow, a native offe York, and Helmuth Heibsu Munich, West Germany, »tt flown to a hospital at the lit: States' Clark Air Base imiiw atel\ after their release onJolot land to Pakistani Ambassador^ t.il) Ahmad Khan. Texaco files motion seeking reversal of $10.5 billion judgment Associated Press HOUSTON — A landmark SI0.53 billion judgment against Texaco Inc. is a product of numer ous errors and should be reversed, according to motions filed Wednes day by the nation’s third-largest oil company. Visiting State District Judge Solo mon CaSseb Jr. scheduled a nearing today to decide whether to approve, overturn or reduce a jury’s Nov. 19 ruling that Texaco used unethical tactics to break up a merger agreement between Getty Oil Co. and Pennzoil Co. Getty backed out of a preliminary agreement to merge with Pennzoil early last year and was bought by Texaco for $10.1 billion. Jurors recommended Pennzoil should get $7.53 billion in actual damages and $3 billion in punitive damages, the highest civil judgment in U.S. history. Houston-based Pennzoil wants Casseb to accept thejury’s decision. But according to Texaco’s mo tions, the verdict should be reversed because there was no evidence that Pennzoil and Getty had a binding contract, that Texaco knew about the contract or actively persuaded Getty to break its previous contract, or tliat Texaco acted with malice to ward Pennzoil. Since the jury’s verdict was an nounced, T exaco has been li ving to convince the public it was a victim of injustice. Even if judgment lot Pennzoil is entered, Texaco attorneys have the right to seek another jury trial and to appeal the verdict. But Texas law requires that it de fendants appeal a damage judgment, thev must post a bond m cash or liquid assets equal to an award, plus attorneys' lees and inter est. II the judge upholds the jury’s SI0.53 billion award, the appeal bond would total almost $12 biTiion, a sum Texaco officials sav is beyond the company’s ability to pay. If the company, which hasa® market value oi $3.6 million,W post a $12 billion bond, Texacotd cials said they would seekall» able legal remedies, includingffi ganization proceedings t* fedet .il bankruptcy laws. HOL'SD Lombardi nation’s toj be presentt of four pi; Casillas, ( O'Neal, Bo or Michigai The lro| granite, is | late Vince The jury rejected Texaco'sastl tation that Pennzoil and GettyY had not vet drawn up a binding®' tract when Texaco entered thtls: ding for Gctiv Oil and lhai Peiuii/ d a S15 billion breach-ol-conts til lawsuit to get revenge against; 1 rival. sful Buy this coiicti 1m ww mm . coach of tli ers. l.oml); 1970 of can Hamme pounds, 1 tackles for for minus Tensive t-ii< had nine c yards in lo? and one ini llammei side-red foi flection of' were first ■gorv. I’m team here." O’Neal, defensive r quarterbac losses to ke T could 1 don’t win of the linal all the St ho Ruth, a hose guard ton Colleg one interc fumbles. "T he at lie Eagles going to tl season), In for attend tilings,’’ Ri I Casillas, tackles, for terback sac nior for the The am sponsored Club of H< dinner go Societv for ... . :.. . . ...TwiG - i# mj§mm .wwii : The elves have taken over the workshop. They say Santa’s gotten all the credit for Christmas. While they did the work. So they want a break. Less work, fewer presents to makeorSantastays tied until New Years. Give the elves a break. Buy your Christmas gifts at Twin City Furniture. This month during Twin City’s Annual Anniversary Sale, save 10% to 57°/o on great Christmas presents of all sizes. M icrowave ovens. Couches. Chairs. TVs. Stereos. Everything in the store. Reduced up to 57°/o this month. All reducing the elf workload. All with instant in-store financing and same day delivery. Give an elf a break. Shop Twin City Furniture’s Anniversary Sale. 219 North Main Downtown Bryan/779-0894