The Battalion. (College Station, Tex.) 1893-current, September 04, 1986, Image 8

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•Maw Koxe
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Page 8/The BattalionAThursday, September 4, 1986
'4£v
Restaurant
Lunch Special
21 Different Dishes Daily
*3.40
Dinner Special
Including eggroll. soup, and fried
*4.50
Fresh Meat & Vegetables
Prepared Everyday
Open 7 days a week
Lunch 11-2
Dinner 5-10
846-8345
Take Out Available
Buffet Special
All You Can Eat
including 9 diff. entrees, eggrolls,
plus free iced tea and dessert.
*3.95
Every Sat. lunch
(11 am-2 pm) and
Sun. Dinner (5 pm-8 pm)
(We also serve from the menu)
Big
State
Pawn
Shop
Hong
Kong
3805 S. Texas Ave., Bryan
COURSE OPTIONS:
nc
INTERIOR DESIGN 101 or 102?
101:
102:
rrt/pREE DELIVERY
and no DEPOSIT
r-l $39.50 MANAGER’S CHOICE
[or] a 2-PIECE PACKAGE — * scou " ,sapp
^ We guarantee the lowest rental rates on
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the length of your rental contract.
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World and Nation
Reporter, wife may face
new charges by Soviets
MOSCOW (AP) — The wife of an
American reporter accused of spy
ing said Wednesday that authorities
have threatened to press smuggling
charges over family jewelry that she
and her husband failed to list on cus
toms forms.
Nicholas Daniloffs wife, Ruth,
said customs authorities called the
Moscow office of U.S. News 8c
World Report on Wednesday to say
that she should come to a customs
clearing house outside Moscow to
sign a statement about the unde
clared jewelry. “My instinct is just to
ignore it (the message),” she said.
The Daniloffs listed carpets and a
diamond ring as their only valuables
when entering the country and
when filling out forms to leave, Mrs.
Daniloff said.
She said thev did not list a pocket
watch Danilof fs father gave him for
his 21st birthday, a locket that lie-
longed to her grandmother and
some “rubbishy old jewelry" that she
kept at the bottom of her jewelry
box. She said they did not consider
the items valuable or believe they
were made of silver or gold.
Customs agents confiscated the
seven or eight pieces of jewelry and
have informed her they are being
valued at S2.210, Mrs. Daniloff said.
“They’re saving we have smug
gled our own things into the country
and now we're trying to smuggle
them out again,” she said. “It’s all
just so stupid. It may just be part of
the harassment against us."
The Daniloffs 16-year-old son,
Caleb, left Moscow on Wednesday to
return to school in the United States.
Caleb said at the airport, “I think
it’s best for me to depart. I don’t
reallv want to, but I think it wouldbe
lietter for my dad if there was no
chance for them to hassle me.”
Mrs. Daniloff sowed to stay in
Moscow until her husband is re
leased, "unless thev want to take me
out of here in handcuffs, kicking
and screaming."
Mrs. Daniloff has accused the
K.CB secret police of framing her
husband in retaliation for the arrest
in New York of a Sov iet I N. ent
plovee, CJennadv Zakharov. Zakha
rov is jailed without bail pendint
trial on charges of spying.
Wa
Daniloff has lx*en held without
f ormal charges in east Moscow’s Le
fortovo Prison since Saturday. He
was at rested bv eight KCBagemsaf-
ter a Soviet acquaintance gavehima
package later' found to contain mapi
marked secret.
Rehnquist criticized
with harsh language
in conference report
WASHINGTON (AP) — The na
tion’s major civil rights coalition
stepped up its attack Wednesday on
Chief Justice-designate William H.
Rehnquist, arguing in a report that
lie has opposed equal justice for mi
norities “at every turn.”
The Leadership Conference on
Civil Rights issued its report a week
before scheduled Senate debate on
the nominations of Rehnquist and of
Antonin Scalia as a Supreme Court
associate justice.
While the report covered many of
the criticisms leveled at Rehnquist
during his confirmation hearings in
August, it was characterized by its
use of harsh language.
The Leadership Conference of
185 organizations said its main rea
son for opposing Rehnquist’s nomi
nation “is his 35-year record of op
position to the fundamental
principle of equal justice under law."
The coalition also contended “he
lacks the requisite candor and sense
of propriety to serve in the nation’s
highest judicial post.”
Supreme Court spokeswoman
Toni House said there would be no
comment on the study, entitled “The
Case Against William Rehnquist: A
35-Year History of Hostilitv to Vic
tims of Discrimination and Un
answered Questions of Candor and
Sense of Propriety.”
The report reviewed Rehnquist’s
career as a private citizen, a Justice
Department official during the
Nixon administration and as an asso
ciate justice of the Supreme Court
the past 15 years.
The report said Rehnquist "op
posed equal rights in the legislature
(where he opposed local public ac
commodations laws), at the polls
(where he sought to block blacks and
Hispanics from voting), and in his
personal dealings (where he ac
cepted racial and religious restric
tions on his real estate holdings).”
Much of the study covered Rehn-
quist’s record on issues such as
school desegregation, voting tights,
public accommodations and racial
makeup of juries.
The report also criticized Rehn
quist’s failure to recall a restrictive
covenant in the deed to his Vermont
home, which said the property
should not he “leased or sold to any
member of the Hebrew race.”
Crews knew
ships headed
for collision
W£LCOf
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R«
er
MOSCOW (AP) — The crews
of both the crowded Soviet pas
senger liner and the freighter
that rammed and sank it on a
clear, calm night in the Black Sea
knew they were on a collision
course, accounts of the disaster
indicated Wednesday.
Soviet authorities reported no
new rescue of any of the 319 peo
ple missing in the Sunday night
sinking of the cruise ship Admiral
Nakhimov. There was little hope
anyone still would be found alive.
Seventy-nine bodies were re
covered and 836 people were
plucked from the water after the
ship, torn open by the freighter’s
bow, plunged to the bottom in
about 15 minutes, too fast forthe
deployment of lifeboats.
Frogmen continued Wednes
day to search the vessel, king on
its starboard side in 155 feet of
water.
I he last of the survivors, in
cluding most of the crew, were
pulled from the sea Mondav
night, and maritime officials ap
peal ed pessimistic about the
chances of surv ival for the miss
ing.
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