Page 6/The BattalionTuesday, October 7, 1986 COSTUTES EES /A ASKS aiakc UP -AMDiVAOPE 37(5 e-.a=i +K 844,-2408 f^ Careers vs. Jobs If you just spent four years getting a college degree, you’re looking for more than a job. we're offering careers with the Kinney Shoe Corporation.® We don’t just talk about promoting entry level people to management. For those who have a true entrepreneurial spirit, we do it. And reward them accordingly. The opportunity to move up quickly, to manage your own store-and-more-is real, whether you start out at Foot Locker®, Kinney Shoes®, Lady Foot Locker® or Susie's.® Kinney representatives will be on campus October 9th. Check with the Placement Office for details. KINNEY SHOE CORPORATION® An Equal Opportunity Employer J MSC CAFETERIA MEMORIAL STUDENT CENTER-TEXAS A&M UNIVERSITY $089 PLUS TAX MONDAY EVENING SALISBURY STEAK Mushroom Gravy. Whipped Potatoes, Choice of Vegetable. Roll or Cornbread, Butler TUESDAY EVENING MEXICAN FIESTA Two Cheese Enchiladas With Chili. Rice. Beans. Tostadas WEDNESDAY EVENING CHICKEN FRIED STEAK Cream Gravy. Whipped Potatoes. Choice of Vegetable, Roll or Cornbread, Butler THURSDAY EVENING ITALIAN DINNER Spaghetti, Meatballs, Sauce. Parmesan Cheese, Tossed Salad, Hot Garlic Bread FRIDAY EVENING FRIED CATFISH Tartar Sauce. Cole Slaw, Hush Puppies, Choice ot Vegetable SATURDAY NOON & EVENING YANKEE POT ROAST (Texas Style), Tossed Salad. Mashed Potatoes W Gravy, Roll or Cornbread. Butter SUNDAY NOON & EVENING ROAST TURKEY DINNER Served with Cranberry Sauce, Cornbread Dressing. Roll or Corn- bread. Butter. Giblet Gravy. Choice of Vegetable TEA OR COFFEE INCLUDED AT NO EXTRA CHARGE ON SPECIALS EVENING SPECIALS AVAILABLE 4:00 PM TO 7:00 PM DAILY MSC CAFETERIA OPEN 11:00 AM-1.30 PM AND 4:00 PM TO 7:00 PM DAILY “Quality First" World and Nation Reagan seeking to discourage false hopes for summit meeting Gorbachev's wife to attend summit; move surprises U.S, WASHINGTON (AP) — Presi dent Reagan sought Monday to dis pel what he termed “inaccurate spec- Lilation and false hopes” that his summit with Soviet leader Mikhail Gorbachev will lead to new super power agreements. Reagan also said he would con front Gorbachev in Iceland this weekend on the Soviet Union’s con- tined military operations in Afghani stan and human rights violations. Meanwhile, House Democrats, saying they don’t want to hamper Reagan’s arms bargaining power at the summit this weekend, said they were willing to compromise on arms control restrictions added to a Penta gon btidget bill. “I believe we will be able to Find a way to compromise,” said House Majority leader Jim Wright, D- Texas. “We do not want to make his task more difficult, we want to make it easier.” He said Democrats are talking with Senate Republicans in an effort to “postpone any confrontation” over Five major restrictions added by the Democratic-run House to a stop gap budget bill. Reagan, speaking to a business group meeting at the White House, said in the strongest terms since the WASHINGTON (AP) — The Reagan administration said Mon day that Nancy Reagan will re main behind in Washington this weekend during the U.S.-Soviet summit in Iceland, despite a sur prise announcement that Soviet leader Mikhail Gorbachev will bring his wife. The United States had no ink ling that Raisa Gorbachev would accompany her husband to the hastily-called superpower sum mit, White House spokesman Larry Speakes said. “It was our understanding that this meeting was to be brief, a lim- Iceland summit was announced last week, that he viewed it as merely a preparatory session for the full-scale meeting he and Gorbachev envi sioned after they first met in Geneva last November. Officials in both Moscow and Washington have said both sides ap- ited number of people traveling,” Speakes said. “It was to be a straightforward business meeting with very little, if any, social activ ity connected with it.” President Reagan and his wife, when asked if the American first lady would now be in the U.S. en tourage, said “No” in unison. Unlike last November’s Geneva summit, the two-day session in Iceland was billed by the adminis tration as all work on arms con trol and other key issues, and no play. pear to be narrowing dif ferences on ways to reduce numbers of medium and long range missiles, but Reagan said the purpose of the session in Reykjavik is planning and prepara tions, not treaty signing and public- ity. “I hope that in explaining all this I have done something to dispel some of die inaccurate speculation and 'false hopes raised about the Iceland talks,” he said. “I expect these tails to he usef ul and successful, butonlv as preparation for future summit conferences.” He added, moreover, “it wouldbe simple unthinkable for world lead ers to meet in splended isolation even as the people of Afghanistan, Central America, Africa and South east Asia undergo terrible sufferings as a result of Soviet intervention," At the same time, Reagan brushed Reagan also said the Soviet decisions I to arrest and hold U.S. News it World Report correspondent Nicho las Daniloff on spy charges shows the differences between our two sys tems. “It was an extremely grave step, but one that could hardly surprise us," he said. “After all, 1 uunan rights I violations in the Soviet bloc remain unceasing because they are institu- tionali/ed and sanctioned by the state ideology.” At the same time, Reagan brushed aside suggestions by conservative critics that by going to the summit, he is sof t on communism. Supreme Court opens term, plans flier-distribution ruling WASHINGTON (AP) — The Su preme Court, starting its 1986-87 term with a new look and a flurry of activity, said Monday it will decide whether government-run airports may prohibit people from distribut ing literature inside terminals. The court agreed to consider re instating such a ban imposed on Jews for Jesus, a religious group, at Los Angeles International Airport. Low'er courts said the ban violates free-speech rights. Chief Justice William H. Rehnqu- ist sat in the center chair of lead ership for the First time and newly installed Justice Antonin Scalia joined in as the court issued orders in more than 1,000 cases and began hearing arguments in disputes al ready under study. In other orders besides the air- port case, the court: • Agreed to use an Illinois case to decide a key point in obscenity pros ecutions: whether local or national sensitivities apply when judging whether material is “utterly without redeeming value.” • Refused to limit the number of school districts represented in a pen ding Philadelphia lawsuit seeking to force asbestos manufacturers to pay for removing many of their products from school buildings nationwide. • Rejected the latest appeal by Dr. Jeffrey MacDonald, the former Green Beret physician serving a life prison sentence for the 1970 mur ders of his pregnant wife and two children. • Refused to kill a lawsuit in which “pro-choice” individuals are seeking to have the Roman Catholic Church stripped of its tax-exempt status because of its anti-abortion lobbying. • Cleared the way for NBC to col lect more than $250,000 from politi cal extremist Lyndon LaRouche stemming from his unsuccessful libel lawsuit against the network. • Turned away the Iranian gov ernment’s attempt to recover a $5 million loan made to Shams Pahlavi, a sister of the late Shah of Iran, by a Tehran bank 13 years ago. • Agreed to decide in a pair of cases from Maryland and Pennsylva nia whether Jews and Arabs are pro tected by federal civil rights laws banning discrimination based on race. • Blocked thousands of former users of the Daikon Shield from su ing the contraceptive device’s man ufacturer anywhere but in Rich mond, Va., where A.H. Robins Inc. is based. In other action, the court: • Ruled that Texas school dis tricts may not ban teachers from dis cussing or participating in union business during school hours. French hostages appeal for help BEIRUT, Lebanon (AP) — Three French hostages said in a videotaped appeal for help Monday that they believe their government has abandoned them to a slow death and they cannot survive captivity much longer. Islamic Jihad, the fundamentalist Shiite Moslem group that holds the Frenchmen and at least three Americans, said it would free them if Kuwait releases 17 prisoners convicted of bombing the U.S. and French embassies there in 1983. Kuwait has refused to free any of the 17 prisoners. The Islamic Jihad statement did not mention the American captives, but the group made the same de mand in the past in exchange for their freedom. Gopies of the 20-minute videotape and the typewrit ten statement in Arabic from Islamic Jihad, whose name means Islamic Holy War, were delivered to of fices of Western news agencies in Moslem west Beirut. Hostage Jean-Paul Kauffmann, a journalist, ap pealed for Premier Jacques Chirac’s government to use diplomacy similar to tactics the U.S. government used to gain the release of American journalist Nicholas Daniloff from the Soviet Union. All three Frenchmen were kidnapped early last year. In a similar videotape from Islamic Jihad last Friday, two American hostages asked the U.S. to work as hard for their freedom as it did for DanilofFs. Jury selection begins in new De Loreon trio DETROIT (AP) — JohnZ.De Lorean was back in court Monday watching jury selection for his trial on federal racketeering charges that he defrauded inves tors in his automobile compam out of S8.9 million. “This isn’t exactly the home coming I was expecting," the 61- year-old former General Motors Corp. executive said. Howard Weiuman, De Lo- l ean’s chief lawyer, said later that the defense hoped to “getajurv like in California, one that wulal low the truth to be heard." De Lorean was acquitted of ch ug charges by a Los Angeles jury in 1984. Referring to an FBI under cover operation that resulted in the cocaine distribution charges, De Lorean said, “They framed me in L.A., and they're doing the same thing here.” A grand jury last year accused De Lorean of diverting invest ments in his De Lorean Motor Co., which built stainless-steel sports cars in Northern Ireland, and using it for repayment of loans, purchase of jewelry and other personal purposes. De Lorean faces a maximum penalty on the racketeering charge of 20 years in prison and $25,000 in Fines. De Lorean Motor Co., a Michi gan corporation founded in 1975, fell into financial difficulty shortly af ter production began in 1981 and filed lor bankruptcy the next year. THE SANCTUARY MOVEMENT AND CENTRAL AMERICAN REFUGEES Tuesday, October 7, 1986 Rudder Theatre MSC Political Forum Admission is FREE This program is presented for educational purposes and does not constitute an endorsement.