• Books • Gifts • Supplies Hours: M-F 7:45-6 Sat 9-5 845-8681 DEFENSIVE DRIVING CLASS July 10 (6-10 p.m.) & July 11 (8:30 a.m.-12:30 p.m.) and July 17 (6-10 p.m.) & July 18 (8:30 a.m.-12:30 p.m.) Register at University Plus (MSC Basement) Call 845-1631 for more information on these or other classes PLITT THLATRLS m ★ TODAY★ AND EVERY TUESDAY ALL FILMS- ALL DAY ‘SPECIAL PRESENTATIONS NOT INCLUDED POST OAK THREE ,1 'TOO H.irvcy flrl 893 27 < ll> HAHHY .na .h. UHAONeT (Fa-11) 0.1^, 4JM t .„ , ;J0 RIveBS Mft ivri CHIPMUNK XTJ TOT 2:9f ):30 8:M ,w t tu»'~7rr &#*; y$: : , I 2002 E. 29th 775-2463 1 THE BEUEVERS r ERNEST GOES TO CAMP pg mm $ DOLLAR DAYS $ CROCODILE DUNDEE pg 13 mm THE SECRET TO MY SUCCESS pg-is Ul g lo THEGATEpg-13 wm GRADUATION ANNOUNCEMENTS • Don’t Sweat - We Can Help - Call Today 59>f9 fpRINTSHOpl) 693-8621 I Quick Quokrv fVinling with ad expires 7/15/87 1801 Holleman • College Srarlon SOME mmi OF WONDERFUL pan S IN THE SMILE FOR YOUR FAMILY’S GENERAL DENTAL CARE CLEANING, EXAM & X-RAYS ★Call For Appointment, Reg. $44 Less Cash Discount $15 • Dental Insurance Accepted • Emergency Walk Ins Welcome • Evening Appointments Available • Nitrous Oxide Available • Complete Family Dental Care • On Shuttle Bus Route (Anderson Bus) l (Anderson Bus) CarePlus^fti MEDICAL/DENTAL CENTER 696-9578 Dan Lawson, D.D.S. 1712 S.W. Parkway M-F 10 a.m.-8 p.m. (across from Kroger Center) Sat. 9 a.m.-l p.m MEAT SCIENCE AND TECHNOLOGY CENTER DEPARTMENT OF ANIMAL SCIENCE JULY SPECIAL!! BEEF SIDES (custom cut, wrapped, frozen) Avg. weight: 300 to 400 lbs: Sold on hanging weight basis $1.25 per lb. BEEF HINDQUERTERS (custom cut, wrapped, frozen) Avg. weight: 145 to 195 lbs: Sold on hanging weight basis $1 -45 per lb. Lean Ground Beef Patties $1.49 per lb. Quarter-pound Patties 10 lbs. per box Half-Pound Patties 12 lbs per box Lean Ground Beef (2 lb. pkg.) $1 -39 per lb. 40 lb. Box $.99 per lb. PAPER WRAPPED SPECIAL!! Beef Cutlets Regular Price Per Pound* Sale 30-40# Box ..$2." $2. 49 $1 ..$5. 19 $4. 49 $4. 19 ..$2. 99 $2. 49 $1 $2. 69 $2. 39 $1 .$2. 89 $1." $1 49 ..$2. 69 $1." $1. 49 ‘Prices are good for paper wrapped beef only Other Beef, Lamb, Pork, Sausage, Dairy Products and Farm Fresh Eggs are available. Prices effec- |gj tive while supplies last or through July 31, 1987. We are open for business Monday through Friday from 9:00 a.m. to 6:00 p.m. We are located on the West Campus between the Kleberg Center and the Horticulture/Forest Science Building. (Phone 845-5651). Page 6/The Battalion/Tuesday, July 7, 1987 World and Nation — Lawyers: Meese made $40,000 in 1-day trades WASHINGTON (AP) — Attor ney General Edwin Meese III made nearly $40,000 in profits from some two dozen speculative one-day stock trades in just 19 months, but none of Meese’s money was funneled into scandal-plagued Wedtech Corp., the attorney general’s lawyers said Mon day. Meese’s money was invested in a variety of large and small companies in 23 trades beginning in July 1985 and in each instance, his investment manager bought and sold the stock on the same day, according to a notebook of information compiled by the attorney general’s personal lawyers. The roughly $39,500 in profits came on an investment by Meese of about $54,500. He profited on 18 of the one-day transactions and lost money on the other five. Meese has been under fire from Congress since last April to disclose where his investment manager chan neled his money. T he attorney gen eral currently is under criminal in vestigation by independent counsel James McKay, who is trying to deter mine whether Meese’s investment manager, W. Franklyn Chinn, fun neled any of the attorney general’s money to Wedtech. Meese has ac knowledged interceding on the com pany’s behalf when he was White House counselor in 1982. Sen. Carl Levin, D-Mich, said, “This response is better late than never, but it raises as many questions as it provides answers.” Levin is chairman of the Senate subcommit tee on oversight of government management, which will hold a hear ing Thursday on financial disclosure by Meese. In their report, Meese’s attorneys said that the attorney general’s in vestment with Chinn “was inadver tently omitted” from a list of assets he filed with Justice Department of ficials in May 1985. The existence of Meese’s Chinn partnership wasn’t disclosed until more than a year later. Meese’s lawyers said that the list which omitted the Chinn part nership was prepared by “Justice Department staff.” That prompted Levin to question why Meese hadn’t read the list before signing it. Meese profited the most from a one-day trade in British Airways — Dl. £ $12,57 1 —on Feb. 11 of this year. He made some $14,000 in from 1 1 one-day trades in 1985 am got $13,000 in profits from 11 out day trades in 1986. The only trade 1987 was the stock in British Ait ways. The remainder of the Meese’s money was earning son $6,000 in interest in money mark i and brokerage accounts at theBt; Stearns brokerage and at the Impt rial Trust Co. Chinn, who is the subject offt: eral and state criminal investigatio: into the Wedtech scandal, wasacc sultant and member of Wedtedi } board of directors from 1985 urn he was forced to resign in Februan Chinn’s fee for the Meese tr» 1 actions amounted to $5,20u at came out of the attorney generai profits. Chinn is expected to takea- j i other $2,500 or so in fees fori! year’s British Airways transaction, Meese said that under the tent of the arrangement, he didn'tkna where Chinn was investing money and didn’t know that 6 was engaging in one-day trading, Korean students fight with police after friend dies SEOUL, South Korea (AP) — Stu dents enraged by a comrade’s death battled police with wooden poles and rocks Monday. Political leaders ap pealed for calm to save talks on dem ocratic reform and preserve the deli cate political truce. The government freed 177 politi cal prisoners in Seoul and eight other cities as part of pledges last week that ended 18 straight days of violent protest against the govern ment of President Chun Doo-hwan. Hundreds of cheering and sobbing relatives and supporters greeted them at prison gates. At Yonsei University in Seoul, hundreds of students fought riot po lice after fellow student Lee Han-yul died of injuries received in a street battle with officers a month ago. “Let’s learn from Lee Han-yul’s spirit!” students shouted. “Down with the military dictatorship!” Po lice fired hundreds of tear gas gre nades as the fighting continued for hours. At the prisons, exulting crowds chanted “Long live democracy!” as they hoisted those freed onto their shoulders and carried them away. Political leaders on both sides ex pressed regret about the 21-year-old Lee’s death, but said talks on revis ing the constitution to permit direct presidential elections and other re forms must continue. Chun agreed to the reforms July 1 after nationwide protests by an op position alliance began June 10. They developed into the worst polit ical violence since Chun, a former g eneral, took power with military acking following the assassination of President Park Chung-hee in 1979. Representatives of both political camps expressed concern that anger over Lee’s death could cause a new round of protests and destroy the truce that resulted from Chun’s ca pitulation to his opponents’ de mands. Kim Young-sam, head of the main opposition Reunification Dem ocratic Party, said: “Lee’s noble death reminds all of us of the signifi cance of the task of realizing demo cratization. However, the process of democratization should not be im peded because of the death.” Chun’s Democratic Justice Party also urged moderation in a statement that said: “Our basic posi tion is that unfortunate incidents like Lee’s death must be wisely over come, with ill effects minimized.” Prison escapee recaptured near racetracl SANTA FE, N.M. (AP) —Au thorities recaptured a prisons capee near a racetrack less that two miles from the penitentian Monday, and hundreds of of cers under shoot-to-kill orden hunted six other inmates whore mained free. Hector B. Torres Jr. wasajrl prehended without incidem about 10:30 a.m. near Tk Downs at Santa Fe after beinji spotted by two security guard! authorities said. Torres was returned to ik Penitentiary of New Mexico, from which he escaped Saturdai night with two convicted killen and four other inmates, official'- said. “He’d been hiding in the loci? area since the escape,” state p Capt. John Denko said, doesn’t admit to being with other inmates that escaped." Torres said he had hidden ii| pinon trees since the escape and that searchers once had cow close to him, Denko said. Torre] was serving a 21-year sentenci for kidnapping, armed robben and aggravated battery. The Downs is almost I ^ mile] west of the prison, which is east of Santa Fe. Former Chernobyl high officials facing charges for negligence ^ KIEV, U.S.S.R. (AP) — Three officials charged with triggering history’s worst nuclear accident by their neg ligence go on trial Tuesday in the town of Chernobyl, within the evacuated danger zone around the power plant where they worked. Chernobyl’s former director, chief engineer and deputy chief engineer are accused of failing to adequa 00801102tely prepare and supervise experiments tliat caused a massive explosion and fire in a 1,000-mega watt reactor on April 26, 1986. Radioactivity poured from the wrecked No. 4 unit following the blast. Thirty-one people died and more than 200 other Soviets suffered acute radiation sickness from a cloud of radioactivity that ultimately circled the world. The former head of Chernobyl, Viktor P. Bryukha nov, ex-chief engineer Nikolai M. Fomin and his assis tant, Anatoly S. Dyatlov, have been jailed for a year while the causes of the disaster were investigated. Officials in the Ukraine have said the three face up to 12 years in prison if found guilty of criminal negligence charges. A limited number of foreign reporters have been in vited to the trial, which is clearly linked to Soviet leader Mikiiail 8. oorbachev s campaign to bold aii oiticials publicly accountable for their actions. Since coining to power in March 1985, GorbacW has made sweeping changes in both governmentafll Communist Party ranks and has repeatedly warned reaucrats at all levels that they will answer for blundtl or acts of irresponsibility. , Lated The decision to hold the trial in the evacuatedto»C () ' of Chernobyl seemed intended to lend maxinn4 ace drama to the proceedings. |; | D'tt' Only a few dozen officials who ad m i n is ter daily ofL, c „ ' ations at the lour-reactor power station and oversee^ contamination work live at Chernobyl, a verdant to*® of wooden and brick cottages 11 miles south of a. • Chernobyl plant. . Lon I he trial also may throw more light on the action' Q ver Chernobyl’s top managers following the accident worst in the history of nuclear power. [lw Details on industrial accidents in the Soviet Un: tjjy, < | j l used to be considered tantamount to state secrets, aniW-j^ ( | complete account of the actions of top officials folHarListi mg 1 ie reactor explosion has not been made public, )j e sa j ( j However, 67 Communist Party members were landfill pelled or received stern reprimands for failing to det “q[ le onstrate leadership and responsibility during the lnt>( | hours of the crisis. pThe ncil LOUPOT’S A sli( posit no At th buy the m 1984 !l te sine Tate Pays Cash RrXJsed Books M Pro pert LOUPOT'S BOOKSTORE • AT NORTHGATE • 335 UNIVERSITY DR. COLLEGE STATION, TX. 77840 846-6312 ioD"" Slmani “You