YESTERDAYS Daily Drink & Lunch Specials Billiards & Darts Near Luby's / House dress code 846-2625 PLEASE PLAN TO ATTEND A SEMINAR BY: MR. RAY BARNHART ADMINISTRATOR, FEDERAL HIGHWAY ADMINISTRATION WASHINGTON, D.C. TOPIC: CURRENT STATUS AND FUTURE DIRECTION OF THE FEDERAL AID HIGHWAY SYSTEMS WHERE: ROOM 601 RUDDER TOWER WHEN: MARCH 27,1987 1:30 P.M. Last Chance to double your reading speed in one hour. FREE Introductory Lesson Benefits include: improved comprehension, increased retention, study skills, higher CPA, more leisure time. DATES: Wed. March 25 & Thurs. March 26 4 and 8 p.m. Ramada Inn Associated Reading centers the company with 12 years experience. Instructor- Vicki Whitener 713-486-4969 Direct or collect CONGRATULATIONS to last class, you Improved 4.5 times. Aggie Hostess Applications are available from Mon. March 23 to Fri. April 3 at 5:00 p.m. They can be picked up on the 9th floor of Rudder Tower. A General information meeting will be held Wed. April 1 at 8:00 p.m. in room 301 of Rudder Tower Page 10/The Battalion/Wednesday, March 25, 1987 World and Nation *3|M I Contra-aid opponents unable to stop filibuster, will try again WASHINGTON (AP) — Senate opponents of aid to the Nicaraguan Contras failed again Tuesday to shut down a filibuster and move toward a vote on a six-month halt in military assistance to the rebels. The vote was an evenly divided 50-50, or 10 votes short of the 60 needed to end a filibuster. Senate Majority Leader Robert C. Byrd, D-W.Va., said another at tempt would be made today and pos sibly yet another on Thursday. “It depends on how much gain we make,” he said. A first at tempt to choke off the fil ibuster failed on Monday, with 46 senators favoring it and 45 voting against it. Texas senators Lloyd Bentsen and Phil Gramm voted against shutting off the filibuster. However. Byrd said the real goal now is merely to rally a “constitu tional majority” of 51 votes, all that would be required to kill President Reagan’s request for an additional $105 million in aid to the Contras when that request reaches the Senate floor later this year. The filibuster by Contra-aid sup porters is aimed at blocking action on a proposed six-month freeze in the flow of aid to the rebels. During those six months, according to the legislation, the Reagan administra tion would be required to account for millions of dollars in private and public assistance provided earlier to the Contras. Contra-aid opponents lost a bid last week to kill outright a $40 mil lion aid installment originally ap proved last year. In another development, the Jus tice Department repeated denials that Attorney General Edwin Meese III intervened at the request of then National Security Adviser John Poindexter to block indictments against smugglers shipping guns to Nicaraguan rebels. Forty-three Democrats were joined by seven Republicans in vot ing to end the filibuster. Thirty-nine Republicans were joined by 11 Dem ocrats in voting to permit it to con tinue. The latest denial came after the Village Voice said Tuesday in a story that Meese blocked the indictments after responding to a request from Poindexter that the investigation could imperil the Contras’ efforts against the leftist government of Ni caragua. Patrick Korten, a Justice Depart ment spokesman, said the story “in sofar as it purports to make any resentation of Meese’s action! utterly, completely false.” Senate Democratic leaderssaid Tuesday that the Contra-aid this spring are just the openings^ of a legislative oattle thatwillread climax this fall in a strugglebmtt the White House and Congreatm the president’s $105 million retpis Those votes will be taken inai different legislative climate,! Democrats said. “At that time it will only taktj votes in this body and a majontti one in the other body andwewlj off the money to the Contras,cuti backing a terrorist war and si steps that could lead to Atnetii military involvement and Amenoi fighting in N icaragua,” said Se Alan Cranston, D-Calif, thedepl Democratic leader. Retired general enters bid for presidential nomination NEW YORK (AP) — Alexander M. Haig Jr. entered elective politics Tuesday with a bid for the presi dency, refusing to rule out a tax in crease and warning against “arms control for arms control’s sake.” Declaring his candidacy for the 1988 Republican presidential nomi nation at a news conference in the Waldorf-Astoria Hotel, Haig em phasized his experience as a former secretary of state, NATO command ing general and White House chief of staff. nation for president and welcomes all candidates as being healthy and constructive for the party.” Haig and former Gov. Pete du Pont of Delaware are declared can didates for the GOP presidential nomination. Rep. Jack Kemp of New York plans to join them April 6. Also considered certain to enter the race are Sen. Robert Dole, Vice President George Bush, the Rev. Pat Robertson and former Defense Sec retary Donald Rumsfeld. marked by clashes between the strong-willed retired general and White House aides. He made leadership the theme of his campaign but offered few specif ics of how he would deal with na tional problems or where he would differ with the Reagan policies. He cited the federal budget deficit as the biggest domestic problem and, when pressed on whether he would rule out a tax increase to help lower it, replied: But he conceded he is a longshot in the political battle to succeed his former boss, Ronald Reagan. Marlin Fitzwater, Reagan’s chief spokesman, reiterated that “the president is neutral in the primary contests for the Republican nomi- Following his announcement, Haig flew to New Hampshire to campaign in the state that will hold the first presidential primary next year. Haig’s 18-month career as Rea gan’s first secretary of state was “No, I would not rule out a tax in crease. 1 would rule out going imme diately to a tax increase so that the heavy-spending ways of the Con gress — the Democratically con trolled Congress now — can con tinue.” Former Marine embassy guard arrested on espionage charges WASHINGTON (AP) — The Ma rine Corps has arrested a second for mer embassy guard on suspicion of espionage as a result of a continuing investigation of Sgt. Clayton J. Lone- tree, the service disclosed late Tues day. The former guard was trans ferred from the Marine base at Twentynine Palms, Calif., to Quan- tico, Va., Tuesday night and will be held in confinement pending an ap pearance before a military magis trate. Lt. Col. John Shotwell, a Marine spokesman, identified the man as Arnold Bracy of Woodside Queens, New York City, a 21-year-old cor poral “whose tour of duty over- )ed Sgt. Lonetree’s at the U.S. Embassy in Moscow.” Shotwell had said earlier Tuesday the Marine Corps would not release the man’s identity before today be cause it wanted to make sure his next-of-kin had been notified of his arrest and transfer. Bracy “has been apprehended for possible involvement in espionage- related activities (as a result of) the continuing investigation of the Lo- netree case by the Naval Investiga tive Service,” Shotwell added. The 25-year-old Lonetree was ar rested in December and transported to Quantico, where he has been held in detention ever since. Lonetree served as an embassy guard in Mos cow and Vienna, Austria, before his arrest. On Jan. 30, the Marine Corps an nounced it would ask a military law yer to approve the start of court- martial proceedings against Lone tree on 19 different charges, includ ing a single count of espionage. The corps has charged that Lone tree, from September 1985 to De cember 1986, provided the Soviet Union the names and photographs of American intelligence agents at tached to the embassy staff. It also has alleged he provided the Soviets with descriptions of the floor plans and office assignments for the U.S. embassies in Moscow and Vienna. Witnesses say corporations strip pensions tt sii OI lo L Fe\ W A SHIN GTON (AP) - (k porations have stripped e:l ployee pension plans of nea; | S16 billion in excess assets ami 1980 while making $145billiori:| empty promises of retiremenicl come and health care to wortaj without setting aside monevi:j pay for them. Congress wastoJ Tuesday. A growing corporate piackUi of terminating retirement pk — often using surplus asseu. takeover wars and sticking lk f government with unfundedlk ities — is putting at risk mfc of Americans who look to ik fined-benefit pensions to uk care of them in their old age,w nesses said. I he Labor Department, ini 1984 study, concluded that wort ci s in terminated plans losealxc 45 percent of benefits theyotta wise could anticipate. The dimensions of the prck lem and proposed solutionsm outlined Tuesday in a day-tot joint hearing before the SeiffiJ labor and House labor-manajf merit relations subcommittees While the Reagan administri lion was applauded for come up with a set of proposals c tended to make pension proms more secure, business, laboraii retirement groups all found fa- with various aspects Even I.abor Secretary Wife Brock, chief architect of the*i| ministration proposal, was hft tant to say its emphasis on (k couraging terminations of k' . overfunded and underfunds pension plans effectively a: Nanrep<>list If you bliste be in new nfor study dresses the issue. “The problem is awesome as: i Have i I don’t know that anyofusta® i the answer,” Brock said. WA' Pentagon: Soviets building weapons supply WASHINGTON (AP) — The Soviet Union continues to deploy new models of nuclear mis siles with an eye toward achieving military supe riority while conducting laser experiments against U.S. airplanes, the Pentagon said Tues day. Russia is also devoting almost three times as much of its gross national product to weapons purchases compared to the United States. And it shows no signs of slowing that build-up, “no mat ter who is general secretary; no matter what pro posals are made, no matter what public relations activities are undertaken,” said Defense Secre tary Caspar W. Weinberger. The Soviet weapons drive also extends to its conventional arsenal, with dozens of new MiG-29 Fulcrum jet fighters along with tanks, artillery pieces and ships having been produced over the past year. This grim assessment of Moscow’s military might was released by Weinberger in the form of the Pentagon’s annual publication, “Soviet Mili tary Power.” Now in its sixth edition, the mag azine-size, glossy booklet has become the Reagan administration’s primary vehicle for releasing in formation about Russian force developments and, in turn, buttressing calls for higher Penta gon spending. percent and 17 percent of Russia’s gross nation product. By comparison, Pentagon spenditj consumes about 6 percent of America’s GNP. The report was released hours before Wf- berger went to Capitol Hill to push for the J 5 ! ministration’s request for a 3 percent increase ter inflation in fiscal year. le defense budget for the no lndi\ “We must realize that we are competing with a dynamic, and an expanding, Soviet military threat,” Weinberger said. Overall, the booklet concludes that Soviet mili tary expenditures are consuming between 15 Weinberger referred to the booklet on sevtf occasions, telling the House Armed Sen# Alio,., I 7^~ Committee that it outlined the “very realtliio |?urecoupioi the growing threat” presented by the Soviet®- |[i| l < l ( 1 ) f, lp ' vitl1 tary machine. That threat, rather than domfr considerations, should be used as the basis^ the Pentagon’s budget, Weinberger panel. SER Attention Class of 9 S7 Vote on Class March 25 & 26 10-3 MSC CASINO '87 H’lNO: APRIL lOth ' days; Acc .Word PRt) PROC ■ reports. Resume 'phone Iv! 1 "*- Prom ■vnc. (409)82: E'P’ile Wo, rrt 5 ' Res ur P-RQU WHEN IN ROME... Tickets on sale at Rudder Box Office starting March 23 for $3.50 X-