SCHULMAN THEATRES 2.50 ADMISSION 1. Any Show Bafore 3 PM 2. Tuesday - All Seats 3. Mon-Wed - Local Students With Current ID’s. 4. KORA A Schulman Theatres present Over 30 Nlte every Thursday! Pre sent your driver’s license at the box office and be admitted for Just $2.50. •DENOTES DOLBY STEREO PLAZA 3 226 Southwest Pkwy 693-2457 We’re looking for a few good men. Captain R. Mahany Class of ’77 846-8891/9036 * KARATE KID II ra TOP GUN ra EXTREMITIES n MANOR EAST 3 Manor East Mall 823-8300 RUTHLESS PEOPLE r 1% STAND BY ME r £8 A FLIGHT OF THE *15 NAVIGATOR p* »** SCHULMAN 6 2002 E. 29th 775-2463 JAKE SPEED ra £11 BACK TO SCHOOL ps-is £8 TEXAS CHAINSAW ra MASSACRE II r »« $ DOLLAR DAYS $ Schulman Theatres & KKYS105 proud ly announce the beginning of "Dollar Days”. Each week we will offer movies for admission of just $1.00. All movies will be shown at Schulman 6 Theatres. This week we are showing the fol lowing: ABOUT LAST NIGHT r £18 "FERRIS BUELLERS rut DAY OFF ro " LEGAL EAGLES n £3 INTERNATIONAL HOUSE of PANCAKES* RESTAURANT All you can eat Daily Specials 10 p.m.-6 a.m. All You Can Eat Buttermilk Pancakes $1.99 Spaghetti and Meat Sauce with garlic bread $2.99 *Must present this coupon International House of Pancakes Restaurant 103 N. College Skaggs Center REST AGS! Aggieland Yearbook Photographs are now being taken for Juniors, Seniors, Vet, Med & Grad Students by AR PHOTOGRAPHY Get In The Book Studio Hours: 8:00 to Noon 1:00 to 4:30 Mon thru Fri Texas 707 across from the A&M Polo Field 693-8183 If you're considering retirement. Consider Walden. Come home to Aggieland. Our stereotypes of senior adults (and retire ment housing) are fading. Thank goodness. Seniors are retired from routine, sure. But they are still busy, active and alive. Seniors want to travel, to go, to learn, to grow. And they want a carefree environment that supports independent living in a safe, secure surrounding without daily drudgery. If you are considering a retirement move, please give us a visit or a call. We are a warm, caring community built for active senior adults. Amenities include: • close to Texas A&M and its educational, cultural and championship sports activities • staff on duty 24 hours a day • lunch and dinner served with style (and private kitchens, too) • transportation • laundry and dry cleaning pick up • weekly housekeeping • activities, travel, library, exercise, pool • parking, elevators, convenience store, etc Wald en Dr. Jarvis and Alma Miller, managing directors Walden on Memorial 2410 Memorial Drive/Bryan 823-7914 Page 8/The Battalion/Wednesday, September 10, 1986 World and Nation Jailed journalist says he’s ‘in for long haul’ Soccer p Classic l the Braz the field Thursda; attend a Youth S( ciation c mott 6S MOSCOW (AP) — Jailed Ameri can reporter Nicholas Daniloff fears U.S.-Soviet tensions over his case are “escalating dangerously” and be lieves he won’t be released soon, his wife said Tuesday. Earlier in the day, Foreign Min istry spokesman Gennady Gerasi mov told reporters a “mutual solu tion” to the Daniloff case could be found, but he declined to be specific. Daniloff was arrested Aug. 30 and accused of spying. Ruth Daniloff, accompanied by U.S. Consul Roger Daley, met with her husband for the third time in Moscow’s Lefortovo prison. She has accused the Soviet gov ernment of framing the 51-year-old journalist and holding him hostage so an exchange can be arranged for Gennadiy Zakharov, a Soviet U.N. employee arrested Aug. 23 in New York and indicted Tuesday on spy charges. After seeing her husband for an hour and 20 minutes, Mrs. Daniloff told reporters he looked drawn but was composed and gave her a thor ough rundown on his conditions and KGB interrogations that have cov ered 28 hours. “He is philosophical,” she said. “He thinks it will be a rather long haul.” Daniloff, correspondent for U.S. News Sc World Report magazine, was arrested by eight KGB agents af ter a Soviet acquaintance handed him a package later found to contain military photographs and maps marked “secret.” On Sunday he was formally charged with espionage, which un der Soviet law can carry a prison term of seven to 15 years or the death penalty. Daniloff has denied the charge. “He thinks his case is escalating rather dangerously and that he wouldn’t like to see it torpedo the summit or torpedo U.S.-Soviet rela tions,” his wife said, referring to pos sibility of diplomatic reprisal by the United States if Daniloff is not re leased. “He said this is getting out of hand,” she said. “We havetoresi it fairly soon or it will jeopardt some important meetings." She a} pat ently referred to Soviet andli moves to arrange a second supe power summit. Concern for Daniloff on rise, Reagan says /L san 404 Ui WASHINGTON (AP) — The Soviets’ detention of Ametican journalist Nicholas Daniloff “is a matter of increasing concern” to President Reagan as diplomatic efforts to win his release continue with no apparent success, the White House said Tuesday. A day after Reagan publicly pronounced Daniloff innocent of the espionage charges lodged against him and wanted Moscow that holding him prisoner threat ens U.S.-Soviet relations, presi dential spokesman Larry Speakes refused to discuss what further steps the administration is consid ering, except to say “there are some.” Reagan and Secretary of State George P. Shultz briefed congres sional leaders on the case but pledged these lawmakers not to divulge what retaliatory moves the administration is considering. British Foreign Secretary Geo ffrey Howe, talking to reporters at Dulles International Airport in suburban Virginia as he prepared for a flight home, said the Dani loff case "... casts a very great shadow over Soviet good faith, a matter which must he of great concern to us." Administration sources, speak iug on condition they not beiden (ified, have said the L nited Staiej mas l>egin expelling Soviets at tached to the United Nations a few at a time until Daniloff b freed. in New York, meanwhile, a federal grand jury indicted Gen nadiy F. Zakharov, a Soviet pinn- < ist employed by the United Na tions, on charges fie tried tobm U.S. military sec rets for the Sovitt Union. Die administration has su; gested that Danilof f . the Moscow correspondent for U.S. News i World Report, was framed by So- j viet secret police in a scheme tc exchange him for Zakharov, who was arrested in a New York sub way station Aug. 23. Daniloff was arrested in Moscow one week later. In an independent action.The Associated Press fxiard of direc tors, made up of newspaper pub lishers and executives of the world’s largest news-gathering organization, canceled a sched nled visit to the Soviet Union later (his month, calling Daniloffsar rest unjustified and demanding his immediate release. Witness says hijackers panicked WIESBADEN, West Germany (AP) — Passengers tried to calm the hijackers of a Pan Am jumbo jet in Pakistan when the lights failed, but the pirates panicked and started shooting because they could not un derstand English, an American sur vivor said Tuesday. Nadya Hussain, 16, choked back tears as she told reporters in Wiesba den about the shooting aboard the plane last Friday. Nineteen people died and at least 120 were injured. The four hijackers are in custody. Asked to describe the scene when the hijackers began firing inside the plane, Hussain said: “When the lights went out, people tried to tell them (the hijackers) the power was off, hut they couldn't un derstand English . . . and they started shooting. “They asked the passengers what had happened, and the passengers said the power was bad. Bui as these hijackers couldn’t understand En glish, except for one, they panicked anyway, and they asked for a radio. “That’s when I realized that the captain wasn’t on hoard. If fie had been on board, he could have calmed them and they wouldn’t have started shooting finally, and shot me.” The three-man cockpit crewel caped through a rooftop hatchafe the Palestinians seized the plant Pan Am officials have defended tit crew’s actions, saying that is thebe' way to ensure that hijackers reniai. on the ground. 9ar, T Fi Hussain, brought to West fo many Sunday for treatment, at neared with her right arm in a because of a bullet wound. She had a long wound on the left sidd her face. “I couldn’t walk because nn had a bullet in it,” she said. "Itwas heavy. It was my arm or my I INF oe