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About The Battalion. (College Station, Tex.) 1893-current | View Entire Issue (Nov. 4, 1986)
cut here 1 Defensive Driving Course Nov. 7, 8 and Nov. 14,15 College Station Hilton Pre-register by phone: 693-8178 Ticket deferral and 10% insurance discount cut here. Students & Faculty io% with current student or faculty I.D. ^excluding sale items* at Page lOTThe Battalion/Tuesday, November 4,1986 CdR QUEST 100,000 Auto Parts! 402 University Dr. E College Station, Tx. The Right Place to buy auto parts.- 696-1721 The Right Place to buy Auto Parts LITMUS Army clashes with rioters in Pakistan KARACHI, Pakistan (AP) — Army troops fired on rioters here Monday and rival ethnic gangs bat tled with guns and homemade bombs, leaving eight people dead in a fourth day of street battles, offi cials and witnesses said. At least 44 people have died and 300 have been injured in violence that began Friday. Hundreds of soldiers were sent to Karachi Monday to reinforce army units deployed over the weekend. Thousands of riot police clashed again with roving gangs of rioters who defied a curfew. The gangs stoned traffic, set fire to buses and other vehicles, looted and set fire to shops and blocked roads with burning debris, witnesses said. Violence began when a group of Muhajirs traveling to a political meeting in Hyderabad passed through a Pathan district in Karachi Friday. A gunbattle between Pathans and Majanirs erupted, and distur bances broke out in Hyderabad when word of the fighting reached there. Warped by Scott McCullo HELLO, LAST ►AV1N65 BANK, YOUR MISSING $6^000... W... ^ Lj5TE:A r ,1 L KOTRN the MOA/n 100 ACC IVEfJT/\LLl PEPOS'/TEP TO /ME., BOT ->., p X WANT CERTAIN SIR... DEMANPS??*; THIS GOES FOK ALL PANKS IN THE NETWORK^ FIRST, A/° b ONE OVERDRAFT LHAR6E lN0T,_ THE MERCHANT AMO 1oo. 006* '-/wr ... ANP if A BANK MAKES A MISTAKE thev pA^nccusroj ACCOUNT Buck MEPiq- m Waldo by Kevin Thoma WE DID IT/ WE KILLED THE WKLBU/R-BEAST/ fl[OOo o [ loo a o UH, WALDO... New ambassador meets Mexico’s president MEXICO CITY (AP) — U.S. Am bassador Charles J. Pilliod Jr. asked not to be compared to his predeces sor, former actor John Gavin, as he presented his credentials to Mexico’s president Monday. “I don’t think you should com pare me with senor Gavin,” Pilliod said when asked if his statements would be as controversial. “He’s pre ttier than I am, and I’m a better ac tor than he is.” Pilliod, 68, was an executive with Goodyear Tire and Rubber Co. of Akron, Ohio. In a prepared statement read af ter presenting his credentials to President Miguel de la Madrid at the National Palace, Pilliod said he had delivered “a personal message from President Reagan reiterating his commitment to strengthening the ties between our countries.” He described U.S.-Mexican rela tions as “dynamic and complex.” “We are friends. . . . There’s no country in the world that has a closer relationship (with the United States,” he said. The ambassador’s post has been vacant since May after Gavin rt| signed after five years in Mexico. Gavin had been accused of null ing "interventionist” speeches. The Mexican government mally protested to Washington I week over the new drug law could reduce funds to any councj judged not to be doing enough; the war against illegal drugs. Jvwy ^ Y - ^ Su gM ( T To Litmus h. Lucille Ball: Star of CBS Television’s "l Love Lucy”. MSC literary Arts is now accepting submissions for Litmus the only student - published Iterary magazine. Submit your work in Poetry, Short Story, Non-Fiction, and Graphics. Come by MSC room 216, the Literary Arts cubicle for needed details. TF "Vr MBA/LAW SYMPOSIUM DECISIONS FOR THE FUTURE Keynote Speakers Jim Briggs Harvard MBA Former Students Susan Sparkman Boston U. Law Roundtables Recruiters Panels Registration $5.°° including lunch SATURDAY NOVEMBER 8,1986 8am-4pm Sign up 10-2pm first floor MSC or Sam Nov. 8 second floor MSC For more information call 845-1515 MSC MBA/LAW SYMPOSIUM COMMITTEE -r ir**rnj|FrrwRNrn* nrrm? w?: m* si'ii!^ j'j. 'i! BATTALION CLASSIFIED PULLS! Call 845-2611 *, RE-ELECT JUSTICE ROBERT M. CAMPRELL SUPREME COURT VOTED BEST QUALIFIED OVER HIS OPPONENT BY TEXAS BAR ASSOCIATION AUTHOR OF 126 SUPREME COURT DECISIONS IN JUSTICE ROBERT M. CAMPBELL, TEXANS HAVE AN ABLE, HARD-WORKING JUDGE WITH PERSONAL AND JUDICIAL INTEGRITY” — Chief Justice Joe Greenhill (Retired) — Chief Justice Robert W. Calvert (Retired) — Justice Charles Barrow (Retired) Dean, Baylor Law School Chairman of Texas Judicial Budget Board Supreme Court’s Liaison with Texas Legislature Supreme Court’s Liaison with Texas Court Reporters & Court Administrators FORMER SCHOOL TEACHER TEXAS NATIONAL GUARD 10 YEARS 2 TIME VETERAN U.S. ARMY “I believe that a fair and impartial judiciary is essential to the continued growth and development of our state. I pledge to continue my work on the Supreme Court in the manner which has merited your support and confidence in two previous elections.” Paid for by the Robert M. Campbell Campaign, P.0. Box 8418, Waco, Texas 76714. mim