OODQ.OZ BOTHER’S BOOKSTORES Complete Line of Used Books 340 Jersey (across from Uniy, Police) 001 Harvey (Woodstone Center)' ROTHER’S BOOKSTORES Your Complete Greek Headquarters 340 Jersey (across from Univ. Police) 901 Harvey (Woodstone Center) ROTHER’S BOOKSTORES BOOKSTORES Custom Silk Screening Specialists 340 Jersey (across from Univ. Police) 901 Harvey (Woodstone Center) E YESTERDAYS Daily Drink & Lunch Specials Billiards & Darts Near Luby's / House dress code 846-2625 COUPON Bring this coupon to the Brazos Valley Golf Range for free $1.25 basket w/purchase of $3.75 basket Children under 12 accompanied by an adult receive free $1.25 basket through September and October C O u p o N Hours Mon.-Fri. Sat. 12 p.m.-9 p.m. East Bypass across form Mill COUPON 3 p.m.-9 p.m. Sun. 1 p.m.-8 p.m. 696-1220 new “NOW B'CS's #1 WORKOUT IS EVEN BETTER” • SupER SAvinqs • SpAcious New pAciliry • SpectacuIar FItness AddhioNS -SALE ENDS SEPT. 14rli- CaIL 846'1017 Sxop By 1007 UNivERsiry Dr. , !'Tr r 1 § !•'k'*; 'iJi'-cw.S % i* is i ••jit'i'. '• ^ j- 'fc- 1 !! BATTALION CLASSIFIED PULLS Call 845-2611 Page 10/The Battalion/Tuesday, September 2, 1986 World and Nation ;Iol Gadhafi blasts Reagan on anniversary of coup TRIPOLI, Libya (AP) — Moam- mar Gadhafi celebrated his 17th an niversary as Libya’s leader Monday by deriding President Reagan and praising Soviet leader Mikhail S. Gorbachev, saying the Libyans and Russians share common interests. “Reagan is a madman, physically and psychologically sick,” Gadhafi told a flag-waving crowd of 5,000 in Green Square, gathered to hail the Sept. 1, 1969. military coup that brought him to power. As the crowd held aloft his por trait and applauded, the 44-year-old colonel gestured with a silver pointer as he vowed to recruit an army from Central America, Africa and Asia if the United States didn’t cease what he called its confrontational policies. “If Reagan doesn’t stop his stupi dities I will form an international army to fight America everywhere, and I’m sure that in a few years the world will be rid of this new Nazi empire,” he said. Flanked by Soviet officials, Gad hafi later reviewed a 90-minute mili tary parade by more than 18,000 sol diers and Soviet-made tanks, SA-5 surface-to-air missiles and Scud ground-to-ground missiles. Gadhafi mixed insults to Reagan and criticism of U.S. policy in his speech with compliments for Mos cow, which he said stood by its re sponsibilities toward Libya. The Soviets have supplied Libya with two frigates, MiG jet fighters and military transport planes to re place losses from U.S. attacks in the Gulf of Sidra in March and on Tri poli and Benghazi in April. Gadhafi’s anti-American outburst came after four months of silence following the U.S. air raid on April 15, when sites hit included his home in Tripoli. An adopted baby daugh ter was one of those killed in the air strikes. Washington said the strike was in retaliation for purported Libyan support of terrorist attacks which killed Americans. Schools adopting AIDS policies NEW YORK (AP) — Pupils with AIDS are attending school this fall in Kokomo, Ind., and Overland, Mo., while in Tucson, Ariz., a child with the disease will study at home until the school district works out a policy. In Seattle, no AIDS cases have been reported in public school class rooms, but the district is ready with a policy should the problem arise. A spot check by The Associated Press shows a growing number of school authorities are taking steps to deal with the fatal disease, and most are leaning toward allowing its young victims to attend class, pro vided they have no obviously conta gious symptoms. In addition, many districts, in cluding Rochester, N.Y., Jefferson County, Ky., and Minneapolis have included lessons about AIDS in their curricula, or plan to shortly. Wyom ing will be making a film on AIDS available to high schools. Still, officials appear divided on what the best policies are, or whether it’s wise to have any hard- and-fast rules. Gary Marx, a spokesman for the American Association of School Ad ministrators in Washington, said, “There is fear that medical facts might not be correct or may change over time.” Since federal authorities began keeping AIDS statistics in 1981, there have been 36 reported cases among children age 5 to 12, and 102 among 13- to 19-year-olds. But it’s impossible to say how many school- children have AIDS, since many of the children have since died or are too ill to attend school. And there may be un reported cases. Maine calls for case-by-case rul ings, but its guidelines add, “for most AIDS-infected schoolchildren, the benefit of an unrestricted setting would outweigh the risk of their ac quiring potentially harmful infec tions and the apparent non-existent risk of transmitting AIDS." Other jurisdictions, such as Seattle and the state of T ennessee, also call for case-by-case rulings but say that in general, efforts should be made to let the children attend school. Donations for MDA hit $400 million! ... this i mcd, hi ormvpo LAS VEGAS, Nev. (AP)—T1 Jerry Lew is Labor Day Teletho raised a record $34,096,773Moi day to soar past the $400 millio mark for the 21-year histom the event. Lewis predicted the Musculi Dystrophy Association, bent! ciary of the telethon, would ras $80 million to $90 million tb vear, including gifts fromdozet of corporations, civic and profa sional groups. "We won't go to the gown merit for help,” Lewis said dura, an appeal. "We don't want tea for permission to save a child. It is the 36th year Lewiski worked with the associaticn which fights some 40 muscle-c:*- stroving diseases, many of wkl are fatal and most of which sr ™ children. One of the more poignant ments of the telethon came singer Eddie Rabbitt told of death of his 2'/./-year-old i 1 imothy, in July. “I became more focusedabd kids after I lost my own," Rabkj said, his voice breaking. “Sora bodv has to take care of theds dren of the world.” He said the boy was born wi diseased liver and a transpk operation f ailed to save his lift I Lewis said this year’s goal viHOHANN SI more than the recotpl — A b $33,181,652 raised in 1985. cointer Mon "One dollar more than b® stoie * n a vear, that’s all I ever promisebui b, kids," Lewis said. K 1 "kites u ■ear-old gii trrv Mel Baby dies after organ rejection LOS ANGELES (AP) — The child known as Baby James, who under went one of a series of pioneering in- fant-to-infant heart transplants, died after his body rejected his implanted heart, a hospital spokeswoman said Monday. The 1 '/a-year-old boy died about 9 p.m. Sunday, said Anita Rockwell, spokesman for Loma Linda Univer sity Medical Center, 60 miles east of Los Angeles. Rockwell said his death followed a futile search for another donor or gan to replace the heart he received April 26. Rockwell identified the child as Nicholas Lawrence Miller. The child’s real name was kept se cret until his death. He was adopted by Thomas and Jayne Miller, of Redwood City, im mediately after his birth FeS. 15, 1985. The boy died during an acute re jection episode, Rockwell said. After being admitted to the hospi tal Saturday, the baby received treat ment to stop his body’s immune sys tem from rejecting the organ as foreign tissue. But, Rockwell said, “the rejection process could not be controlled or reversed despite vigorous efforts by the transplant team.” The Miller boy was the third of six infants to receive pioneering baby- to-baby heart transplants oy Dr. Leonard Bailey. Bailey stirred medical controversy in Oct. 26, 1984 when he implanted a baboon’s heart in the newborn known as Baby Fae. She died 20'/z days later. The Miller child was the second of the six to die. A Texas infant, Nicky Carrizales, Bl. "The \ flh smoke ft chaos. 1 Bl running. ■)! . John 1 Hergenev s< He, said the died July 2 after undergoing Wfourothr heart tr ansplants in two days, wounded. IT r , , ftses said i Ehe f()ur other patients-kM e | | oveesail as babies Moses, Eve, RacnelaW. : .i Jesse Dean Sepulveda - are ‘ m doing well, Rockwell said. ETl em, _ , w j .ftrted arrest Before Baby Moses underwent | (V1|h()Ut ( , transplant last Nov. 20, only two' fant-to-infant heart transplantsfft' ein()n y had been performed. air of Pick 't -r-. • . , , r department I hose patients both died afteri|j em() |j s [ ie( | surgeries, which occurred in M otjeof the eh. New York and 1984 in London, dan shoppm] inlhe ceiling. Mexican leader says nation ‘can’t lose heart’|“ MEXIGO CITY (AP) — Despite a year marked by the devastating Mexico City earthquake and another steep fall in oil prices, President Mi guel de la Madrid said Monday that Mexico “cannot afford to lose heart now.” In his fourth state-of-the-union message, de la Madrid recognized the strains and pressures buffeting Mexico from the drug trade and its massive foreign debt, but said “the constant problems have not made us succumb to anguish or despair.” The president is almost two-thirds through a six-year term marked by almost constant crisis. He said the objective for the remaining two years of his term is “to set ourselves firmly back on the road to growth within a context of stability.” The state-of-the-union message traditionally starts observance of September as “the month of patriot ism,” including Independence Day Sept. 15. T he president’s Institutional Rev olutionary Party has controlled Mex ico since 1929. The 41 deputies of the opposition National Action Party ordered a boycott of the speech to protest alleged election fraud in the northern states of Chihuahua and Durango in July. FURNISH YOUR ENTIRE APARTMENT FOR ONLY *39 0 ° PER MONTH WITH NO SECURITY DEPOSIT! Certified FURNITURE RENTAL THE STUDENT BODY SPECIALISTS 913-D HARVEY ROAD WOODSTONE SHOPPING CENTER 764-0721 FREE GIFTS JUST FOR STOPPING BY!! MECHANICAL PENCILS • STADIUM CUPS • NOTEBOOKS De la Madrid said state and local elections this year “were carried out with respect for the law.” He said he cannot intervene to settle the dis putes because the Constitution pro vides that the results be certified at the state and local levels. growing and becoming more plex as it is affected by urban and) dustrial development. “We are not unaware that there are still deficiencies in elections that we must correct,” he said. “But this cannot be made a pretext for incit ing disorder, intimidating citizens or perpetrating acts of violence.” “In moments of economic this far-reaching transformation society has combined with nan adversities and reverses of forti abroad to create a sensation ol certainty and doubt," he said The president also said that Mexi can society is changing rapidly. “We must not allow ourselves be taken in by the false face it some put on conditions in the res the world to make us believe they an option for happiness and co dence.” JWASH INC fonmental ac ing to sue ih< Bjisive bioloj pile sitnulta fund to emu G ALLER Y HMVfSS4JV 10% Student Discount Discount is on all parts & labor on Nissan Products only. We will also offer 10% dis count on labor only on all non-Nissan products. Student I.D. must be presented at time workorder is written up. We now have rental units available for service customers 1214 Tx. Ave. 775-1500 he I Ifends, > ™inst tl 'lUhl a j: tom mot 'uhi is, Nengthe i&cord I), Pigical w jDelegai [Otintries oeva Bl acc< ftl he ft |ht recen agan a< ojologica 'fpition “ Jlv deli jThe V Pfanizat ZSM Sigma Alpha Your Party Professionals 1986 Fall Rush Schedule Mu BM'II lea : if • Fri. Sept. 5 • Sat. Sept. 6 • Fri. Sept. 12 • Sat. Sept. 13 -Happy Hour 4-6 I Flying Tomato -Treehouse I Party Room 9:00-? -Happy Hour 4-6 Flying Tomato -Treehouse I Party Room 9:00-? *TFi X mtiHWii I reformation Call: Brian Mendelson 696-1472 or Sammy Hotline 696-; '"[recent yeai ■logical ant Be group Hearinghous . 'jn' on the |: Nvironmerita arch. he lawsuit iopy of whi; |rters in ad IS. District st ®|) all Def Btch aimed . Menses agair —Jnder the Piled State; [>re than 10! bed not to B agents fo Jt the accon Misive reseats