The Battalion. (College Station, Tex.) 1893-current, September 17, 1986, Image 10

Below is the OCR text representation for this newspapers page. It is also available as plain text as well as XML.

    24 hr. Special
8 Days A Week
2 Eggs Your Style
3 Golden Brown Pancakes
3 Crispy Strips of Bacon
$2."
The Kettle Restaurant
Good at all Kettles
Qonfaots
for JBqss
Are you tired ot paying premium
prices (or contacts? We (ill your
prescription to your doctor's exact
specifications.
. 'DAILY -EXTENDED
S 28 -°° „„ /,„«*33.00
•Specialty Lenses Slightly Higher
CONTACTS FOR LESS, INC.
Denver 303/369-6027
Toll Free 1-800-521-5101
your business deserves
some prime-time
exposure.
readers use
those pages lo see
what's happening on tho tutx>.
lei them know what s happening wilh you.
con 845*2611 lo place advertisements In ol ease.
j /STUDENT
GOVERNMENT
TEXRS A * M UNIVERSITY
G*'
SENATE VACANCIES
3
2
1
1
1
Ward IV
Ward I
Education Sophomores
University Apartments
Liberal Arts - Graduates
Applicatons at 221 Pavilion
Due by 5 p.m. Fri. Sept. 19
Meeting Dates
Sept.
24
Oct.
8
Oct.
22
Nov.
5
Nov.
19
Dec.
3
Page 10/The BattalionAVednesday, September 17. 1986
Back To School
Wearing Contact Lenses!!
Quality Contact Lens Fitting
|H\ /
and Follow-up Care
Soft Daily Wear Lenses
$169 Clear Complete
$189 I inted
■ 4 “ I
Includes examination, lens care training session, starter solutions
k'it, and 6 mths. follow up care. Offer expires Oct. 15. Lenses for
astigmatism or extended wear available at extra cost.
\ few - 1
f
1
Call for Appt. Dn Kathryn Yorke
764-0669 Post Oak Mall
MSC
FIRST GENERAL MTG
Wed. Sept. 17
7pm 601 Rudder
POLITICAL FORUM
WANTS YOU!
~C_jJ
CET INVOLVED IN
RHA Cosine!
Applicolions for Co-Choirmen ond
b-CI
Sub-Choirmen ovoiloble in Povilion
due doles: Oc!« 1
Oct* 8
Co-Chrmn
Sub- Chrmn
• •
V {•
COMPLIMENTARY SALE
Texas A&M Aggies shoes make available directly to you
by the same manufactures of such brand names as Ree-
bok, Nike, Puma, and Adidas.
originally $49. 95 each
Soft, removable cushion
injury - preventive heel
stabilizer
Number 1 choice soft
leather
100% cotton inlay
Endurable and high-per
forming
cappausachi outer sole
.■ . ‘V: .
DATE:
PLACE:
Sept. 17, Wednesday,
8am-6pm
Sept. 18, Thursday
8am-6pm
Ramada Inn
410 Texas, 696-4242
Warped
I'VE. HAP TO ?UT UP
WITH A PICTURE! OF M
BUTT OH X.P.
FOR A WEEK NOW
IT'S TIME TO RETALI
by s Cott McO
Former hostage claims US
employs double standard
^■i of Ante
^nls court
eme Court
jtrgt i s depar
Only two of
H:ans, Lov
Itidii and
WILLI AMS VILLE, N.Y. (AP) —
Former hostage Benjamin Weir said
Tuesday the government is follow
ing a double standard by negotiating
with the Soviets over an American
reporter but refusing to bargain for
the Lebanon hostages’ release.
U.S. News & World Report corre
spondent Nicholas Daniloff was ar
rested by the Soviets on Aug. 30 and
charged with spying. He was re
leased Friday in the custody of the
U.S. Embassy in Moscow. Simulta
neously, a Soviet United Nations em
ployee charged in New York with
spying was released in the custody of
his ambassador.
Weir, held for 16 months by Shiite
Moslem extremists, spoke at a con
ference in the Buffalo area.
Weir, 62, said a letter was released
Tuesday by Islamic Jihad, purpor
tedly from hostage David Jacobsen.
In Huntington Beach, Calif., Ja
cobsen’s son, Eric, said the letter re
flected the elder Jacobsen’s views de
spite numerous misspellings and
grammatical errors.
Islamic Jihad, a Shiite Moslem ex
tremist group, released the three-
page handwritten letter to a Western
news agency in Moslemmi
Parts of the letter wntj
Eric Jacobsen in a telep
view.
The letter asks: “Who
interested minute by
spv journalist DanilofTbuiii
interested one minute inos
and he didn't do anvihinga
.. . Are not we Americans!"
W eii was released bv
had on Sept. 14. 1985. Aui
he warned that the otherS
could Ik- executed if
lem prisoners in Kuwaitiji
i reed.
Moscow soys it wants
Daniloff case settled
MOSCOW (AP) — A Foreign
Ministry spokesman said Tuesday
that Moscow wants the case of Amer
ican journalist Nicholas Daniloff re
solved soon and that it should not be
allowed to harm superpower rela
tions.
Boris D. Pyadyshev, First deputy
head of the Foreign Ministry’s infor
mation board, was asked at a news
conference if there was any
movement toward solving DanilofFs
case before Foreign Minister Eduard
A. Shevardnadze and Secretary of
State George P. Shultz meet in
Washington Friday.
The two are supposed to discuss a
summit, and White House officials
have warned a summit is in jeopardy
unless Daniloff returns home first.
“I am not sure whether it is cor
rect to relate this case to the encoun
ter” between Shultz and Shevard
nadze, Pyadyshev said.
“No one has placed any time limit
on this case,” he said. “As regards
the Soviet side, we would be happy
to have this case solved as soon as
possible, and would be happy not to
have this case at all.
“This case should not hamper So-
viet-American relations, which are at
a rather low level, even without this
case, and our opinion is that this case
should be dealt with in a quiet man
ner without dramatizing the situa
tion.”
Daniloff, a correspondent for
U.S. News & World Report, was ar
rested in Moscow Aug. 30 by eight
KGB agents and has been charged
on three counts of espionage.
French increase security
after 8 days of bombings
PARIS (AP) — The French, keep
ing a wary vigil for more terrorist
bombs in their midst, are trying to
juggle normal routines with new se
curity steps that some say play into
the bombers’ hands.
The Stock Exchange and two
Metro stations were hastily evac
uated in what turned out to be false
alarms.
In the past eight days, four bomb
ings have killed a total of three peo
ple and injured more than 100. The
most recent bombing, on Monday,
was inside the central police station.
ing stricter visa requirements, were
put into effect.
Some commentators warned that
the security measures ordered by
Premier Jacques Chirac encourage
the bombers by creating a mood of
fear and doubt. Some worried that
using the armed forces established a
worrisome precedent for a democ
racy, while others said the imposi
tion of visas would scare off tourists.
Even before Monday’s bombing,
new anti-terrorist measures, includ-
The French, who tend not to suf
fer officialdom lightly, quietly sub
mitted to opening bags and even
body searches at stores, theaters, and
other public places.
Air Force
2nd contra
on fightef
Prac
WASHINGTON (AM
\n Force and the Genes I
n.miu s Corp., after monW
foliation, have agreede
ond, multi-year comractij
jet fighters totaling$4.5®|
1 he contract, annouiwj
M outlay in a brief fej
awards, calls for General!)
ics’ Fort Worih, Texas,d
prov ide 720 F-16sbyMavi!
1 he contract reflectsik|
chase of 180 Fighting FaktJ
craf t each year duringtlre[f
running from fiscal!
1989.
The 1 bur-year buy, dit ?i
such multi-year procureiril
the F-16, was authorized! 1 f
gress in late 1985inat
down production expense-1
The Air Force and Gei^MATHIS (/
namics, the nation’s seco:'|exas A&M gr
iMembers c
jRogerio N
Javid Hug
m
est defense contractor,to' , |iisJing in Lao
negotiating the deal even tvere sad but c
The first multi-year pujMconfirmati
of the plane, coveringtk|§aw b een j f j e]]
from fiscal 1982 to fiscal%nt.
eluded 480 planes at a ’Bj/Ve can qu
roughly $2.6 billion f wondering,” sr
Force believes it saved When you ha
$257 million on thatdeal n|t to know
The Air Force said t^'mgfid. But n
pects to save roughly ™j'vill be a co
by committing itself no*
purchase of 720 planes* 1 '
four-year period.
The service previously
such savings result from® p
ity of General Dynamics' 1 p*
tain a stable production^
assembly-line operation.
Bet
SMILE
FOR YOUR FAMILY’S GENERAL
DENTAL CARE
$
29
00
By Con
F
Jpcas is ex pi
^^It&icial times
lexl year proi
rear for Texas
“cohomist says.
H r ' Carl Ai
letter fron
Extensior
a™ receipts f!
0 b( ‘ considera
1985
CLEANING, EXAM & X-RAYS
*Call For Appointment
• Dental Insurance Accepted • Emergency Walk Ins Welcome
• Evening Appointments Available • Nitrous Oxide Available
• Complete Family Dental Care
even witl
CarePlus^ut
MEDICAL/DENTAL CENTER
696-9578
Dan Lawson D.D.S. 1712 S W - Parkwa Y M - p 10 a -m.-8 p m.
(across from Kroger Center) Sat. 9 a.m.-1 p.m.
Prices di
vear.
Pining hare
urvival of the
^ it is run.
jP'mes are U
Utc. but they
e > Anderson <
ll'uk those
Pess, and n
hough T«
ggling fi na
Worse ol
rr rrnent p
/overnmen
A net for t
“The go
J ble for f a