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About The Battalion. (College Station, Tex.) 1893-current | View Entire Issue (March 6, 1987)
Jost-’s 4004 Harvey Rd. 776-8979 11-9:45 Closed Monday kmum 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 Ctdmichangas Fajitas T-Bone Steaks Red Snapper Chainpas Complies tas 1 ostadas de Folio Broeheta de Camarones Folio a la Farr ilia Enchiladas Sortenas Menus vary between restaurants. Please call for information & Daily specials Jose's features a full service bar and banquet facilities for up to 120 people. Please come and join us in our coun try setting, only 1 Vi miles east of Post Oak Mall on Harvey Road. SMILE )N N Y Vi FOR YOUR FAMILY’S GENERAL DENTAL CARE $ 29 00 CLEANING, EXAM & X-RAYS ★Call For Appointment, Reg. $44 Less Cash Discount $15 • Dental Insurance Accepted • Emergency Walk Ins Welcome • Evening Appointments Available c Complete Family Dental Care • Nitrous Oxide Available • On Shuttle Bus Route ^(Anderson Bus) CarePlussibfi MEDICAL/DENTAL CENTER 696-9578 Dan Lawson D D S 1712 S W Parkway M-F 10 a.m.-8 p.m. uan tawson, o.u.a. (acro88 (rom Kroger center) Sat. 9 a.m.-l p.m. ieto md xon eceive ate. INTERNATIONAL WEEK March 2-6 _ ’87 Fashion & Talent Show Awards Ceremony March 6, 8pm Rudder Auditorium $2. 00 March 7, Sat., 7pm MSC201 Party will follow ceremony (location will be announced) Sponsored by INTERNATIONAL STUDENT ASSOCIATION this year supporting UNICEF / Presents ARTY LINE Are you ready to PARTY but, tired of keeping track of what's going on all over town? Call the Party Line for all of the Nightlife informa tion for the Bryan/College Station Metroplex: • Happy Hours • Drink Specials • Bands • Etc. It's the only place to call if you're ready to PARTY!! 846-1234 A basketful of cash is better than a garage full of 'stuff Have a garage or yard sale this week - Call 845-2611 Friday, March 6, 1987/The Battalion/Page 9 Negotiator shows optimism over superpower arms deal BRUSSELS, Belgium (AP) — The chief U.S. arms negotiator gave the NATO allies an upbeat assessment Thursday of prospects for a super power agreement to scrap medium- range nuclear missiles in Europe, sources said. Max M. Kampelman and the two other delegates to the U.S.-Soviet arms talks in Geneva, Maynard W. Gliman and Ron Lehman, briefed the 16 NATO ambassadors at a closed-door, two-hour meeting be fore flying to consultations in Wash ington. The Geneva negotiations got new life last weekend when Soviet leader Mikhail S. Gorbachev announced willingness to sign a treaty on me dium-range missiles separately from a package accord covering long- range missiles and “Star Wars,” the U.S. plan for a space-based defense system. The United States agreed in prin ciple and submitted a proposed treaty to Soviet negotiators on MOSCOW (AP) — Poet Yevgeny Yevtushenko says the ban on Boris Pasternak’s epic novel “Doctor Zhi vago” more than 30 years ago re sulted from intrigue in a misguided Kremlin and from what he called provocations in the Western press. The novel will be published in the Soviet Union for the first time next year. “We are now righting a tragic er ror with regard to a most honest writer, a man who never in his life would have thought that he could become the object of political specu lation,” Yevtushenko said in an in terview with the Associated Press. Yevtushenko, who in the past has clashed with Soviet authorities and the literary establishment, is a mem ber of an official panel created to honor Pasternak. Pasternak died in 1960, five years after finishing the book, and Yevtu shenko said plans call for the novel to be published in installments in the literary monthly “Novy Mir” begin ning next January. That will be the first opportunity Wednesday that would eliminate U.S. cruise and Pershing 2 and So viet SS-20 nuclear forces from Eu rope. European countries generally have welcomed the progress but have urged that the deal include big cuts in shorter-range Soviet missiles capable of striking Western Europe. In Moscow, a Foreign Ministry spokesman said that the govern ment’s initial reaction to the U.S. treaty proposal was “very positive” and that the Kremlin wanted a final agreement “as soon as possible.” In his address to the North Atlan tic Council, NATO’s highest political body, Kampelman stressed that obstacles to a formal accord re mained, said the NATO sources, who spoke on condition of anonym- ity. Kampelman said much bargain ing remained on the questions of verifying compliance with an agreement and linking the withdra wal of mid-range missiles to reduc- for the vast majority of Soviets to read the moving story of the doomed love of a Russian doctor for the beautiful Lara during the years of the 1917 Bolshevik Revolution and the Russian Civil War. Pasternak won the 1958 Nobel Prize for literature after “Doctor Zhivago” was published in the West. The work contains a political theme as well, accusing the Communist sys tem of having corrupted the age-old Russian way of life. The book’s publication abroad ex posed Pasternak to a savage cam- aign of political denunciation at ome, an ordeal that may have has tened his death. Days after news reached Moscow of Pasternak’s Nobel Prize, the Liter- aturnaya Gazeta literary weekly pub lished an editorial calling Pasternak a Judas and likening the literature prize to 30 pieces of silver. Since Mikhail S. Gorbachev be came Soviet leader in March 1985, some other writers have been pub lished in Soviet editions. tions in shorter-range Soviet nuclear rockets. Yet he expressed optimism about reaching full agreement, the sources said. “Of all the consultations we’ve had with Kampelman, this was probably one of the most positive,” one source said. The seventh round of Geneva arms talks originally was to end Wednesday, but after the Soviet ini tiative both sides agreed Monday to extend talks on medium-range mis siles indefinitely. Currently there are 316 U.S. and 243 Soviet mid-range missiles in Eu rope, although NATO contends the Soviets have about 200 more in the Asian sector that can be rapidly transported to Eastern Europe. Glitman told reporters in Geneva on Wednesday that questions of veri fication and limiting shorter-range systems could be difficult. Judge halts commercial similar to song LOS ANGELES (AP) — A fed eral judge ordered B.F. Goodrich Co. to stop using television and radio commercials that he says closely resemble a song by rock singer-composer Tom Petty. U.S. District Judge J. Spencer Letts on Wednesday agreed with Petty’s copyright suit, saying the advertising campaign for Good rich’s TA Radial tires and Petty’s song, “Mary’s New Car,” are not identical but “are very, very much alike ... in the words as well as the music.” His temporary order prohibits the tire maker from further use of the ad pending another hear ing March 13. Goodrich’s advertising agency, Grey Advertising Inc., tried to buy the rights to “Mary’s New Car” last August, but Petty re fused, his lawyers said. As a matter of principle, Petty has never licensed any of his songs for commercial use. ‘Doctor Zhivago ’ published after 30-year Soviet ban THE 1986-87 AGGIELAND WILL BE TAKING MAKE-UP PICTURES... MARCH 2 UNTIL MARCH 6 ATAR PHOTOGRAPHY 707 TEXAS AVE. SUITE 120B 8:00 A.M.-12:00 P.M. AND 1:00 P.M.-5:00 P.M. MONDAY THROUGH FRIDAY