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About The Battalion. (College Station, Tex.) 1893-current | View Entire Issue (April 15, 1987)
THERE’S A HEW FABRIC CARE OH HARVEV ROAD. TAKE THIS AD ALOHG & WATCH IT STRETCH VOUR mOHEV. WE’VE GOT: Convenience Full service for all your cleaning needs. 7-6 M-F, and 8-4 Sat. Location Post Oak Square close to Post Oak Mall. 1100 Harvey Road, Suite A Quality 91 Years of experience, with professional expertise in alterations and a multitude of services to make your life easier and your clothes nicer. Value Fabric Care Dry Cleaners, excellent prices with the care your clothes need. THE DEAL: The following specials, in celebration of our new'est store, are good in all College Station Fabric Care Cleaners locations until the end of May: 1100 Harvey Road (Post Oak Square) 2418 S. Texas Ave. (Parkway Kroger Center) 505 University Drive (formerly College Station Cleaners) Men’s/Women’s jeans or pants $1.89 ea. Men’s shirts laundered for 79C ea. Men’s/Women’s two piece suit or plain dress (dry cleaned) $4.25 Three sweaters (dry cleaned) $4.89 Three pants, Men/Women’s (unlined, dry cleaned) "Your Professional Launderer and Dry Cleaner' Bryan/College Station THE NEW LOCATION: 1100 Harvey Road, Suite A College Station 696-2366 <¥ ONLY 3 DAYS LEFT! Page 12AThe Battalion/Wednesday, April 15, 1987 SC0NA committee member applications available in room 216e MSC. Due by ^:00 P.M., Friday, April l?* President receives tax refund Warped Books • Gifts • Supplies Hours: M-F 7:45-6 Sat 9-5 845-8681 II 11. r 1*1 ( ft 1 .AO Served with Chips & Hot Sauce MTV & Sports in Aggie Room Approved Checks-Credit Cards 3109 Texas Ave. Bryan 823-7470 A-I-D-S TESTING Absolute Confidentiality Call 776-7777 SANTA BARBARA, Calif. (AP) — President Reagan and his wife Nancy paid $123,517 in taxes on an adjusted gross income of $336,640 in 1986, according to a copy of the pair’s tax return. The Reagans’ tax form, which they signed on Monday and which the White House press office made available to reporters Tuesday, shows the Reagans got a tax refund of about $31,000. They set aside $15,000 of the re fund to apply to 1987, the forms showed. In a statement accompanying the release of the tax form, Reagan said that “for most of us, Tax Day has never been what you would call a cause for celebration. But this year is different. “This is the last gasp of the old tax code,” he said in a statement. “This April 15th is the last time Americans will pay the higher, complicated rates of the old system. Starting this year, tax reform takes over.” The Reagans donated approxi mately $30,000 to charity. Senate seeks account records connected to Iran-Contra deal WASHINGTON (AP) — The Senate urged a skeptical federal judge on Tuesday to order re tired Air Force Maj. General Richard V. Secord to release foreign bank records believed linked to the Iran-Contra arms deals. U.S. District Judge Aubrey E. Robinson Jr. said he would rule in the case, but he called the order the Senate was seeking “a charade,” and said the Swiss might reject it. He suggested what ever decision he makes will surely be appealed. SCHULMAN THEATRE^ 2.50 ADMISSION 1. Any Show Before 3 PM 2. Tuesday - All Seats 3. Mon-Wed - Local Students With Current ID's 4. Thur - KORA "Over 30 Nite” •DENOTES DOLBY STEREO Senate attorney Michael Davidson said the Tower commission, appointed by Reagan to in vestigate the Iran-Contra affair, had identified Secord’s “prominence in global arrangements with respect to shipment of arms to Iran.” chart found in the safe of fired National Securit\ Council aide Oliver North. The Senate Iran-Contra committee wants the records to learn about “the flow of money through these bank accounts,” Davidson said. The Senate voted last month to seek a con tempt of court citation that would threaten Se cord with imprisonment if he did not sign docu ments giving investigators access to bank records in Switzerland, the Cayman Islands and Panama. Secord’s attorney, Thomas C. Green, said Tuesday that such an order would violate the re tired general’s constitutional protection against self-incrimination. |iulgc Robinson told Davidson.theStnas vei . be had problems with the consentck* Davidson sent” in the The commission’s report also said Secord was involved in a network supporting the Nicaraguan rebels known as Contras. It said contributions ap pear to have been routed to the Contras through a series of private organizations, some of them linked to Secord-controlled bank accounts by a “This statement that Gen. Secord is In-ing asked to make under the threat of contempt and threat of imprisonment is nothing more than compelled speech. “It’s the equivalent of transporting Mi. Secord to Switzerland or some other foreign destination (and) making him say to bankers ‘I consent to re lease of bank records,’ ” Green said. context was merel) a legal term so“tM shall !x' construed as consent" to satisfy 5* (lavman Islands law. And be said die Swiss aulhoritiesc to honor the directive, knowing that jected to signing it. But Robinson nodded when Davidsonj that tfie only issue before the judge istk law empowering Congress to seek com diret ting production of documents. Secord’s lawyer suggested the com defer its dec ision to give the Senate time mine if it could obtain the Swiss bank retwti del a l ’.S.-Swiss treaty. fhe Senate, m a related effort tobi .ilxmt Secord s affairs, has voted to reoua iled imnuinitx from prosecutionforMsd ies of Sec oid companies. Joan Corbin and S Napier, in ordei to c<impel them totestihi the Senate panel. Fc PLAZA 3 226 Southwest Pkwy 693-2457 SCORPION r 7:15 feSS * MANNEQUIN pq £3 •LETHAL WEAPON r .7:25 9:45 Rapist’s release angers citizens; officials consider moving parole MANOR EAST 3 Manor East Mall 823-8300 * PLATOONr 7:10 5:40 ARIST0CATS g 7:251 9:351 POLICE ACADEMY IV pg 7:201 9:501 SCHULMAN 6 2002 E. 29th 775-2463 ANGEL HEART r 7:20 9:50 SOME KIND OF WONDERFUL pg-13 $ DOLLAR DAYS $ This Week’s Features Are: CRITICAL CONDITION r 7:20 9:45 ’CROCODILE DUNDEE pg-13 7:25 9:35 OVER THE TOP pg MARTINEZ, Calif. (AP) — A plan to parole a convict who hacked the arms off a 15-year-old rape vic tim has caused so much anger in An tioch that state prison officials are considering changing the parole lo cation, a state deputy attorney gen eral said Tuesday. A judge continued until Friday a hearing held on a suit to stop the corrections department from send ing Lawrence Singleton to Antioch. Police on Monday had warned angry Antioch residents not to take vigi lante action if Singleton was paroled there as planned April 26. Morris Lenk, a state deputy attor ney general, said in court that the Department of Corrections is taking residents’ anger into consideration and might change the parole loca tion. Officials have said there is a possibility Singleton could be pa roled to a state in the South where he has relatives. The 59-year-old former merchant seaman picked up Mary Vincent hitchhiking in September 1978 and raped her, cut off both her arms be low the elbow with an ax and left her to die on a road near Modesto. He has been in prison since 1979. Antioch residents complained and started petition drives as soon as the plan was disclosed, and Police Chief Len Herendeen said that some resi dents have been circulating Sin gleton’s photograph. “One thing’s for sure: If he’s not a danger to us, we’re a danger to him,” said eighth-grader Amy Rickerson, who attended a Monday night meet ing of the Antioch Police Commis sion. Herendeen cautioned 200 resi dents at the meeting against resort ing to violence. Police will be closely watching Singleton, who will have to stay in his home from 10 p.m. to 6 a.m. daily. “A lot of threats have been made publicly and 1 would take them se riously,” Herendeen said in an intei - view.“I can just picture some red necks driving by his house at 2 a.m. and shooting up the windows.” Parole officials said they usually parole convicts to the count) where they last lived. Singleton did not want to return to San Pablo, where he last lived, so another city in Con tra Costa County was chosen. Under restrictions set by slate pa role officials, Herendeen said. Sin gleton would also be required to un dergo psychiatric counseling and be forbidden to drink alcohol, leave the county or contact his former wife or daughter. Singleton was sentenced to serve 14 years and four months and earned an early release for good be havior and involvement in a work program. Hearing shot Hinckleywral to serial killei WASHINGTON (AP) Triple murderer Thtoi Bundy told Secret Servian that he received threeorf# ter s from presidential as |ohu W. Hinckley Jr. dun exchange of corresponds year, prosecutors said Tu$ Assistant U.S. Attorned Adelman said in cowl Bundy told the Secret) that 11 incklev began wri in May I98(i. During a hearing Morf psvi hiatrist unexpeciedli s ealed that Hinckley had> Bundy, 1 lad sought the add# mass killer Charles Man* had received a letter fro® son follower Lynette (“&]* T i onime, imprisoned for# to kill President Ford in If Seve Hall n Insu etho< llty an Joved :nefi The |AC k ley m lies f < Pren Ip I : ■aims T'emiu I “We I He i Inatio Iso mi IWilsi pi facu fusually culty ay to the con |flicial loin o ipinioi “We ilson tat ou Ifth