i' N si Tl Page 12/The Battalion/Friday, October 24, 1986 laki:vii:w CLUB 2 miles off the East By Pass on Tabor Road BYOB Bring your canned Beer in your own ice chests This Saturday & Every Saturday DJ Playing Your Favorite Country & Rock All ages welcome Z2ZZZZZZ2Z2Z2Z2S22222Z YESTERDAYS Daily Drink & Lunch Specials Billiards & Darts Near Luby’s / House dress code 846-2625 * * * Bryan Drive Train Finally someone your can trust for ★ All forgein & domestic ★ Auto Repair * * * * * * * * * * * y ★ Specialists in Manual transmission, rear end, ^ J drive shaff & front wheel drive repair ★ ¥ j ★ Parts & repair on 4x4, foreign & domestic ★ 268-2886 ? ♦‘3605-C S. College 40% OFF *DESCENTE Clothing 20% OFF all other clothing In stock We service all makes Professional Sales & Service’ Bianclii 846-BIKE White confident he’ll win election despite new polls AUSTIN (AP) — Gov. Mark White, rejecting recent opinion polls that show him trailing former Gov. Bill Clements, voiced increasing con fidence Thursday that he again will defeat the Republican he ousted from office four years ago. Although some polls within the last month have shown him as much as 15 percentage points behind, White said his position is improving. “The (late September) Gallup poll showed us neck-and-neck,” White said. “The poll that 1 ran personally (earlier this week) shows us in the same position.” White spent much of Thursday filming new television commercials. During a late-night interview Wednesday aboard his campaign plane, the Democratic incumbent told the Associated Press he believes he has overcome much of the an imosity that dogged him during the primary. In May, White claimed less than 54 percent of the Democratic vote to win renomination. But then, he said, “I was running against perfection.” Now, voters have a clearer picture of the finalists. “We’re down to two candidates,” he said. “People have a chance to compare and contrast records.” White said he was able to accompl ish many things Clements failed to achieve, including school reforms, increased funding for highways and passage of a statewide water conser vation plan. Although Clements has accused White of knowing only how to “tax and spend,” White said he believes voters understand the necessity for his administration’s tax hikes. “It was literally a choice between that (higher taxes) and bad schools and bad roads,” he said. “Peo pie know that.” At a fund-raising reception for White in Houston, Sen. Lloyd Bent- sen, D-Texas, said, “Just a couple of months ago, you heard people say ing Mark White couldn’t he elec ted, that he was down in the polls.” However, Bentsen said, that now has changed. “I don’t hear that kind of talk 1 heard two or three months ago,” he said. “The talk I hear now is that he’s even; he’s pulling ahead.” Meese's remark on Court draws criticism from lawyers WASHINGTON (AP) — The head of the American Bar Associa tion on Thursday criticized Attorney General Edwin Meese’s statement that Supreme Court decisions on the Constitution do not represent the absolute law of the land. In a speech Tuesday night at Tu- lane University in New Orleans, Meese said government officials should be guided by their own views of the Constitution rather than al ways deferring to the Supreme Court. “Supreme Court decisions are the law of the land just as acts of Con gress are the law of the land,” said Eugene C. Thomas, president of the 200,000-member ABA, the largest lawyers’ professional association in the country, in response to Meese’s comments. “Both can be tested in the courts, but unless — and until — they are overturned, they are the law of the land,” Thomas said. A Supreme Court decision binds the parties in the case and also the executive branch for whatever en forcement is necessary, Meese said. But he added that “such a deci sion does not establish a ‘supreme law of the land’ that is binding on all persons and parts of government, henceforth and forevermore.” The ABA president said, how ever, that until a court decision is overruled, “public officials and pri vate citizens alike are not free simply to disregard that legal holding, for it is a part of the body of binding con stitutional law of the land.” SHOW YOUR AGGIE PRIDE! JK 14 KT. GOLD Great With Any Fashion Look. Terrific Gift Idea, Too! 1 6 50 ea. Other styles available. JEWELERS POST OAK MAIX • SHOE TRADE-IN SAIl Bring in your old relics of outdated, ugly, up, worn shoes and we'll give you $5.00Off toward any new (regular price) footwear Qioose from our complete collection of Red Cross Shoes* Socialites, Cobbies or Gobble Cuddiers. Hurry in now. Good thru 10/31/86 The shoe store with more! Slzes...servlce . selection POST OAK MALL AMEX Use Wyatt’s Entrance MC/\1 696-7671 II IMI/^DC JUrMlwKO 20% OFF /%} i ■ with A&M Student ID Good on all Regular and Sale Price Merchandise including... Esprit • Santa Cruz • Pepsi • Swatch Calvin Klein • Emanuel • Union Bay Tomboy • You Babes • Gunne Sax iGood Only Saturday, October 25,1986i YOUNG MENS 20% OFF with A&M Student ID Good on all Regular and Sale Price Merchandise including... Generra • Union Bay • Calvin Klein Brittiania • Levis • Buggle Boy • Gant Claiborne • Arrow • World island Good Only Saturday, October 25,1986 Coupon must be presented along with current A&M Student ID at time ot purchase. shop Dillard’s monday thru saturday10-9, Sunday 12-6; post oak mall, college station AMERICAN EXPRESS CARD WELCOME Dillard