returning to the original location
Page 12/The Battalion/Wednesday, November 19, 1986
at 109 Walton Drive!
The ENERGY keeps building
The RANGING never ends
$1°°
WED.
Coronas
Police: Auto
exec killed
by terrorists
Warped
by Scott McCul
Thurs, Fri, & Sat
FREE BEER
from 8-10
PEKING
EXPRESS
PARIS (AP) — Police said Tues
day they believe two women from
the terrorist group Direct Action
killed industrialist Georges Besse.
The 58-year-old president of the
state-owned Renault automobile
company was gunned down on the
street outside his home about 8
Monday night. Witnesses said the as
sailants, two women, approached
Besse on foot and escaped the same
way. Police said none of the wit
nesses could provide detailed de
scriptions of the women.
Pamphlets found in a Paris sub
way station claimed responsibility in
the name of Direct Action, a terror
ist group of the extreme left that has
carried out numerous other attacks,
authorities said. A police spokesman
said the printed statements ap
peared authentic and carried the or
ganization’s symbol, a five-pointed
star.
Besse had been named president
of Renault in January 1985 in hopes
of turning the struggling company
around. He instituted an austerity
program that cost about 22,000 jobs
and irritated labor.
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EXCELLEYtT I SEE ON YOUR
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WRAT YOU DID?
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Rates
Chinese Fast Food
(Continued from page 1)
Nov. 19-31
Thanksgiving Special
All Vou Can Eat
Lunch Buffet
$3.69
(tea incl.)
764-8960
606 Tarrow
Open: M-Sat. 11am-2:30pm
4:30-9pm
Drive Thru 11-10pm
Open Thanksgiving
Boyle said the nuclear plant is the
problem.
“The company’s financial prob
lems are almost entirely a function
of poor decision-making at the River
Bend Nuclear Plant,” he said.
Draper, citing an “urgent need
for quick action,” sent letters to may
ors of the 66 cities served by GSU.
He asked them to try to get their city
councils to act in favor of request by
Dec. 15 so the PUC can handle the
case by Jan. 1.
Cities have original jurisdiction
over electric rates, but the decisions
can be appealed to the commission.
“We know that many of our cus
tomers are hurting as a result of the
area’s economic troubles, which also
are a major factor in GSU’s prob
lems,” Draper said.
GSU’s problems include an $80
million rate reduction ordered by
the PUC in June in response to the
company’s $134 million rate hike re
quest. GSU agreed to the negotiated
decrease when it appeared possible
the commission might order a larger
decrease.
Witnesses say they saw assault
possible killers of Filipino leftist
MANILA, Philippines (AP) —
A top justice official said Tuesday
that four witnesses reported see
ing a roadside assault by men who
could have been the killers of
prominent leftist leader Rolando
Olalia and his driver.
Deputy Justice Minister Sil-
vestre Bello said the witnesses saw
men attacking a man early last
Thursday along the road where
the bodies of Olalia and his
driver, Leonor Alay-ay, were
found hours later.
Bello said police questioned the
witnesses, who said the attackers
looked like men in police
sketches. A special task force is
seeking the killers.
Olalia, 52, headed the militant
May 1st Movement, the country’s
largest union federation, and the
leftist Partido ng Bayan, or Peo
ple’s Party.
Bello said the man being at
tacked could have been AM
and his assailants might have;
dumped Olalia's Ixxly. Thel
ies were found not far apan
the highway.
Two local newspapers said:
lice suspected the killers
members of a gang ofkilleni
hire from nearby Cavite City.
Authorities have reltast:
sketches of three men sought
the case but have denied niak
arrests.
Ruling
(Continued from page 1)
firms the Department of Agriculture
decision concerning his own sexual
misconduct,” he said.
Jones, a Republican, first crossed
swords with Mayfield in 1981 after
the Reagan administration named
Mayfield to replace Jones as exec
utive director of the ASCS Texas of
fice, which oversees federal farm
programs.
Mayfield had previously worked
under Jones in the office.
Jones continues to collectirl
a year in what he has deserfc'
“make-work” position in Waq
Froi
ton.
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This Is Your LAST Chance!!
Since
Juniors, Seniors, Grad.,
Med. and Vet students
didn't get their pictures made,
the J\ggieland is giving them
one last chance.
Get your picture made by
November 21 at AR Photgraphy II
Mon-Fri
8-12 1-5
707 Texas
Suite 120-B
(Across from the
A&M Polo Field)
Freshmen and Sophmores deadline Nov. 7.