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About The Battalion. (College Station, Tex.) 1893-current | View Entire Issue (Oct. 21, 1986)
DEFENSIVE DRIVING CLASS Oct. 24, 25 and Nov. 1 Register at University Plus (MSC Basement) Call 845-1631 for more information on these or other classes { Ufz£.a.tz£. $2 Picnic at Q^t^an^jn^ CER^ack SJ-*£.t£.x ) conjursi an Enigmatic fiuzzCs. ai hz fixoljs-i t/is itij-Cing X£.f2X£.i.i.ion of ^ l/ictoxian <c^f-ai.txa£ia. MSC Cepheid Variable presents General Meeting Tuesday, October 21 8:30 301 Rudder Texas A&M Flying Club Monthly Meeting Tuesday, 7:30p.m., Oct. 21 at the Airport Clubhouse. For More Information Call Don Read, 696- Come Learn To Fly With (Is! Ski Winterpark January 9-16, $285. 00 includes: Condo accommodations 0 5 days, 4 days skiing, lift tickets, and ski rentals Roundtriptrans. call: Steve Buras Rick Popp Lori Claesmann 696-7958 846-7506 693-9611 Limit of 46 people Deadline for sign-up Nov. 1 with a $150.°° deposit Sponsored by the TAMU weightlifting Club Cj«?UNTING win Host: I (society THE OFFICE VISIT MEETING” October 22 7:00 p.m. 701 Rudder Guests: TOUCHE ROSS & CO. and TENNECO Reception Following Battalion Classified 845-2611 Page lOTThe BattalionATuesday, October 21, 1986 Castro says 3rd reactor will be built Warped by Scott McCullai |HELLO FROtf'/OOR LOCAL BANK AGAIN, WITH 5»ME I WORE, of 5 FECIAL Service charges^* you STUPEL/VTS ON A TIGHT SO DGE.T\ PE pyCTE-P TO AAAKL CCNfHMTLY OVERDRAWN? yoo MIAMI (AP) — Cuban leader Fi del Castro has announced that a third nuclear reactor is planned for his country, according to a Havana Radio broadcast monitored Monday in Miami. Cuba has two 400-megawatt reac tors under construction at Cienfue- ? ;os in southwestern Cuba, 150 miles rom Florida. Castro said many of the technicians from that project will stay to build the third reactor in northern Oriente Province on the is land’s eastern end. M '^1 ANP SOON \NE mcyiKHS TO INSTALL A MONEY machine, right in THF A«!M POLICE St AT 10/ 1 50 KE MEMBER WE' RE^l Your local SANK, ANP VJE'ReENTRUSTED with keeping your MOA/EY- ... IN FACT, VIE KEEPL OF 100R fAONElMl THAN WO UKf 1 ' (REMEMBER I TW ABOUT SERVICE Cli -c Vol.82N Waldo by Kevin Thona He gave no details about the type of reactor to be built, nor about when it would start. The Cienfuegos plants are to go on line in 1990. DOCTOR. 1 IT'5 AN E merge Ncr/ The plants at Cienfuegos are So viet models, but Western experts say they use safer, more modern tech nology than the ill-fated Chernobyl plant. ov-i CRYf^ I ourc LOUD! “No installations in the world are built safer than the one we are con structing at Cienfuegos,” Castro said Sunday. WeVf Already closed FOR THE DAY.' WELL... ALL RIGHT, BRING HIM IN. rI6H t ! )UST WHO DO <H£Y TH/Wk TH£T ™ ARE 2 NURSE 1 TAKE A Airm.. " 5 TARTlNG IHKDimi, ALL 5TUDCRT5 Aft AEOulRED TO SUSTAIN INJURIES ONLY Cmi THE QUACK SHACK'5 normal business k HOURS." rksht/ L High court to rule on trademark use in ‘Gay Olympics’ WASHINGTON (AP) — The Su preme Court said Monday that it would decide whether Olympic offi cials may bar a homosexual rights group from using “Gay Olympics” as the name of an athletic competition that it sponsors. In a case from San Francisco, the justices will study whether the United States Olympic Committee and the International Olympic Com mittee have exclusive trademark control over the term Olympic. In other action, the high court: • Rejected a challenge to the Rea gan administration’s action in Jan uary 1984, with the support of Con gress, to establish full diplomatic relations with the Vatican. • Agreed to decide whether the free speech rights of a public clerk- typist in Houston were violated when she was fired for saying she hoped someone assassinates Presi dent Reagan. • Refused to revive a Paducah, Ky., ordinance declaring any busi ness a public nuisance if it engages primarily in selling or showing ob- cene material. • Agreed to decide in an Okla homa case whether railroads may be forced to pay proportionally higher state property taxes than other busi nesses. • Refused to shield the daughter of former Philippines President Fer dinand Marcos from imprisonment for refusing to cooperate in a federal investigation of alleged bribery of Philippine officials by U.S. arms dealers. • Agreed to examine the public’s right of access to private beachfront property in California. The Olympics case concerns a ho mosexual rights group called San Francisco Arts and Athletics which organized the first “Gay Olympics” in 1982, prompting Olympic offi cials to file a lawsuit. Slouch By Jim Eaii "I guess Td have to say that doing a research paper on a movien saw alxout killer tomatoes’ would lye inappropriate subject maiterk a course in agronomy." ical NATO leaders say missile deal puts Europe at mercy of Soviets Buddy( environ f scale m< GLENEAGLES, Scotland (AP) — NATO defense ministers gathered Monday at this golf resort to con front the Americans about a near deal at the Reykjavik summit that raised concern that Europe would be left at the mercy of superior Soviet conventional forces. President Reagan and Soviet leader Mikhail S. Gorbachev almost reached agreement to remove me dium-range missiles from Europe, a prospect that caused complaints from some NATO generals and more discreet grumbles from poli ticians worried about Western Euro pean security. U.S. Defense Secretary Caspar Weinberger arrived by helicopter on the eve of the two-day meeting that will debate the strategic future of NATO following the summit at which both sides offered huge nu clear arms cuts. The basic fear is that withdrawal of U.S. cruise and Pershing 2 mis siles would leave Western Europe in an inferior position to the Commu nist Warsaw Pact’s larger conventio nal forces. At the meeting of the 16-nation NATO alliance starting today, the European defense ministers were to raise the issue with Weinberger. Chancellor Helmut Kohl of West Germany, perhaps the most worried of the Europeans, was in the United States and was expected to spell out his concerns to President Reagan. In an article published Monday in the Bild, Kohl’s top security adviser, Horst Teltschik, said, “The abolition of all nuclear weapons is a fantastic goal. “But it could make war in Europe more likely again as the considerable superiority of the Soviet Union in the conventional field persists,” Teltschik wrote. “Disarmament must not be allowed to burden the part ners in the Western alliance, but rather it must strengthen their secu rity.” In NATO headquarters in Brus sels, the alliance’s deputy supreme commander, Gen. Hans-Joachim Mack, complained last week that Washington did not seem to have considered the strategic implications of the deal. There also is concern that if the cruises and Pershings went, Western Europe would face attack from short-range nuclear weapons in which, according to Western esti mates, the Warsaw Pact has a 9-1 su- Britain’s Prime Minister Margaret Thatcher, is cutting back. penonty. On conventional forces, the War saw pact has a 2.1-1 superiority over NATO in tanks, according to West ern esimates. NATO has 2.29 mil lion troops in Europe, the United States estimates, while the Warsaw Pact has 2.82 million. Without the nuclear deterrent, West Europeans would also be forced to spend more on conventional defense at a time when even the most hawkish leader, N ATO agreed to thee:: T in December 1979, andmlPf RE 1 100 medium-range missiie;'Pj e, K lolu ready in place of the total ft BP kidnap nuclear missiles due to b(dfi4|j| res * < ^ en 1 in Britain, West GermanjU*®f or ^ le ^ gium and the Netherlands!»bP handw end of 1989. pepurpor tionary Just, had abducte — — «of Ruth Stock market falls 26 West Germany, nearest to the So viet bloc and without the indepen dent nuclear arsenals kept by Britair and France, pushed hardest to de ploy U.S. medium-range missiles. points in slow trading Biers then* NEW YORK (AP) — The stock market contracted another case of the Monday blues, declining broadly in selling attributed to rising interest rates and activity by professional program traders. The Dow Jones average of 30 industrials, which was up 43.87 points last week, fell 26.02 to 1,811.02. Volume on the New York Stock Exchange was a sluggish 109.01 million shares, down from 124.11 million Friday. Interest rates rose in the credit markets, pushing prices of long term government bonds down about f 5 for every $ 1,000 in face value. Analysts said upward pressure on interest rates helped prompt weakness in stock-index and that led professionals^ to buy the futures and stlsi vidual stocks. In the overall tally,dedimi sues outnumbered advance nearly 3 to 1, with 1,112llll , 408 up and 405 unchanged Nationwide turnover in Mil listed issues, including trall^! , those stocks on regions'5 changes and in the ovefA counter market, totaled 1$ million shares. At the American Siocii change, the market value® closed at 261.31, down 1.85. Standard & Poor's index nit' industrials fell 3.13to2ii and S&P's 500-stock conl|)« , index was down 2.87atSW Ba M© H RtSUURANT Serving The Finest Mexican Food to Texas A&M Students and Faculty for over 15 years House Specialities Include: Zarape’s 308 Main Downtown Bryan 779-8702 9:30-8:45 Closed Mondays Fa, imiiliifili 1 s <• Rad Snapper Cbalupas Compoestas Tostadas de Polio Brocheta de Camarones Polio a la Parrilia Enchiladas Nortenas Mentis vary between restaurants. Please call for information & Daily specials ■■■■■■up to 120 people. Please come and join Its in our conn- only 1 •/? miles cast of Post Oak Mall on Harvey Road. 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