: °ach is s y go so# 4 beat win e and la onest abos istant • want toll not goj^ n’t have want top t here dooro dways leai ‘n in it ti n boss, la got to be s the wai Thursday, November 12,1987/The Battalion/Page 13 60 oz Pitcher $ 1 DO a: (Continued from page 1) like the African National Con gress. The losers, Jordaan said, will be the blacks for whom the sanc tions are designed to help and the U.S. businesses that pull out. “The U.S. unfortunately will be the loser of this very danger ous game it’s playing with our country,” he said. “It will be de moralizing to American business and will mean a transfer of assets to other countries. It’s a complete fantasy to think only the South African government will get hurt.” Other countries, like Japan, al ready have taken over the mar kets that American businesses abandoned, Jordaan said. Noting that many American companies are desperate to get out of South Africa, he called U.S. attitudes toward his country hypocritical. He asked the audi- Hall of Fame ; got toss* abanujot a replio >o you loti : I canbt d?” think lk k Coach i ot saying n’t thinii he’s got p s. TneT'tl veil. Hea- at our pn el as far it would thinktk a full-field FBI background check, ence of about 50 why Americans are so selective about their mor als; that if sanctions are imposed against South Africa, why aren’t they imposed against the Soviet Union? The U.S. media has made it fashionable for Americans to jump on the bandwagon oppos ing South Africa, he said. But Jordaan accused the media of dis torting the story and said that those demonstrating against apartheid generally know little about the actual social system in the country. “I don’t blame the ordinary American for the impressions created by the electronic and written media,” he said. “I come from a country the media love to denounce.” Jordaan said the white-black confrontations have been greatly exaggerated and that reforms are gradually putting the black ma jority on a more equal footing with the mostly-white ruling class. In the future, there will be equal representation for everyone, he said, but told the students not to expect an overnight change in a social system that has been ac cepted for about 300 years. “We are going to find a solu tion, and the future system will definitely not be based on apart heid,” Jordaan said. But, he said, the system won’t be based on total equality, either. “We’re not forcing people to get apart from each other,” Jor daan said, “but we’re not forcing them together.” He noted desegregation re forms in universities, sports stadi ums and trade unions as proof that serious efforts are being made to change the present sys tem. The only laws remaining that discriminate against South African blacks, Jordaan said, are thos requiring the separation of residential living areas and a pop ulation registration law. Waylon Collins, president of A&M’s Students Against Apart heid, called Jordaan’s remarks a “distortion of facts.” Collins ques tioned Jordaan about the will ingness of the South African gov ernment to make significant reforms in the political system. Collins said the interests of the South African government, which he called a manifestation of evil and the devil, will always be with the whites. Divestment and disinvestment will perturb the economy, Collins said, but are necessary if change is to be made. He said negotiation would have been credible in the past but is not a feasible solution now. “Given the current situation, the path is towards violent revolu tion,” Collins said. FM 2818 North of Villa Maria, Bryan 822-2222 Must be 21 years of age Thursday & Saturday S with coupon expires Nov. 28 Marines We’re looking for a few good meti. Captain R. Mahany 846-9036/8891 Kennedy which could take weeks. And, in a conciliatory tone after months of tough rhetoric, the presi- ching jd dent abandoned his earlier promise it would a guyU s here. 8< e to be. a dangK er they better ok institutio: >zc He'injurt: j the icoma No* (Continued from page 1) to fill the court opening, Reagan said he would not actually submit Kenne dy’s nomination until completion of ird Mooif on I* ng the of h arthrt il recovi four toiE y that Tat ven forth gin in e. o play thi ie miradt it he didn But Taw 1 play nes 5y ns to give the Senate a nominee that “they’ll object to just as much” as Bork, his first candidate, who was re jected on a 58-42 vote. “Sometimes you make a facetious remark and somebody takes it se riously and you wish you’d never said it,” Reagan replied to a report er’s question. “That’s one for me.” The president announced Kenne dy’s selection in a nationally broad cast appearance in the White House briefing room, accompanied by the judge, his wife, Mary, and their ! three children. The choice appeared to be a clear effort to end a politically embarrass ing episode for Reagan, who once said that winning Bork’s confirma tion was his No. 1 domestic priority. Abandoning any pretense of con frontation with the Senate over filling the vacancy, Reagan said, “The experience of the last several months has made all of us a bit Reagan called for a bipartisan ef fort to fill the opening, created by the retirement in June of Justice Le wis F. Powell. On Capitol Hill, the reaction echoed Reagan’s attempt to over come the bitterness generated by the Bork and Ginsburg nominations. "I can’t see any good reason for anyone opposing this, from Jesse Helms to Teddy Kennedy,” said Sen. Pete Wilson, R-Calif. Sen. Ken nedy, D-Mass., had led the fight against Bork, while Sen. Helms, R- N.C., once had threatened to filibus ter against Judge Kennedy as not sufficiently conservative. Sen. Joseph Biden, D-Del., chair man of the Judiciary Committee that will handle the nomination, said “Kennedy seems on the surface like a mainstream conservative justice whom I can support, but I’m going to withhold final judgment until I know a lot more about him. Ob viously, we have learned that it’s not wise to be hasty in these nomi nations.” Sen. Dennis DeConcini, D-Ariz., considered a swing vote on the Judi ciary Committee on nominations, said Kennedy “comes with good cre dentials. He’s well respected.” During a 35-minute meeting Monday, Reagan asked Kennedy if there was anything in his back ground that would prove embarrass ing, presidential spokesman Marlin Fitzwater said. He said there was nothing. Kennedy said he had been asked if he ever smoked marijuana. “The answer was — no, firmly, no,” he said. Kennedy, passed over when Rea gan picked Ginsburg Oct. 29, was flown to Washington last Saturday when Ginsburg pulled out. He underwent hours of “no- holds-barred” questioning by Rea gan’s top lieutenants Sunday about his personal life and integrity, Fitz water said. That was followed by 10 hours of interviews by FBI agents Monday and Tuesday. Among other things, FBI agents looked into Kennedy’s onetime posi tion as a lobbyist for liquor distillers and opticians. White House chief of staff Howard Baker reported to Reagan Wednesday morning that no problems had cropped up in Kenne dy’s past, and the announcement was hurriedly arranged. Kennedy has written opinions upholding capital punishment, the legality of paying women less than men in comparable jobs and the Na vy’s policy of discharging sailors who engage in homosexual conduct. In his most highly publicized deci sion, later upheld by the Supreme Court, he struck down the “legis lative veto” by which Congress lim ited power in the executive branch. PICKUPS PLUS Complete service and repair on all pickups, vans and 4WD's. Free Estimates 512 W. Carson 775-6708 a SERVING AGGIELAND FOR OVER 5 YEARS NMMMM' 20 na® es, all " :fr nen asl n Zim® 9 is and % Soviet newspaper exposes ills of psychiatry MOSCOW (AP) — Arbitrary diagnosis, abuse of power and bribery have tainted Soviet psychia try, and a citizen can be found insane simply for not kowtowing to employers, a Soviet daily said Wednesday in a stunning expose. “Psychiatric science and practice have long ago been shut off from openness by a high and solid fence,” the Komsomolskaya Pravda newspaper said. “Behind the fence, there is lawlessness,” it added. The paper’s six-column article was the longest on psychiatric abuses to appear in the state-run press and was clearly linked to the current cam paign for “glasnost,” or greater openness on so cial problems. Due to the arbitrary way Soviet patients are now diagnosed, the paper said, “the same person can be recognized as a schizophrenic in Moscow, a psychopath in Leningrad and healthy in Khar kov.” Although Komsomolskaya Pravda’s article was groundbreaking by Soviet standards, it made no reference to charges by human rights activists and Western groups that psychiatric hospitals are used to warehouse political prisoners. In the past, some of the most serious charges of abuse of psychiatry in the Soviet Union were leveled by psychiatrist Anatoly Koryagin, 48, who was sentenced to a labor camp in 1981 for his ac cusations. He was released last February and al lowed to emigrate to Switzerland. On Oct. 29, Koryagin addressed the Royal College of Psychiatrists in London and said the Soviet Union withdrew from the World Psychiat ric Association in 1983 to avoid the humiliation of being suspended or expelled for using the sci ence against political prisoners. Vladimir Titov, a former political prisoner, was released from a psychiatric hospital last month. He told reporters Oct. 20 that at least a dozen hospitals throughout the country hold people convicted of political offenses. Prisoners in such hospitals are subjected to heavy medication, poor food and unhealthy liv ing conditions, Titov said. iboutjok er is a* iis coach' 3S. id talk igh I re *j o stay 4 ed to Cubs ]ubs call 1 y to to . lation. ft and I( Lee E lia d td since the sitting jther g) t there!■ most of; e next H bout a n a suf : pitch to Dutton* :hase to' win net 1 year, A' /were a 1 rare lat' ; overp AGGIES 17 ARKANSAS 13 Chanello’s Thursday - Sunday Game Special — GIG ’EM 20 16 99 Ask for your 12th Man Pizza 12th Man Pizza 12 toppings or less 12th Man Pizza 12 toppings or less $14 $11 00 00 (No double items or extra cheese) Offer Good Thru November 15 No Coupon Necessary 696-0234 M'- PIZZA DELIVERS Hours Sunday 11 am-Midnight Mon-Wed 1 lam-lam Thurs-Sat 1 lam-2 am You will enjoy tasting treats | from the cookbook, HULLABALOO IN THE KITCHEN, in the Patio Bookshop November 14 from 11:00 to 1:00 p.m. Meet representatives from the Dallas A&M University Mothers’ Club who compiled the recipes. C*UAS A&M UNIVTJiSn All proceeds from Hullaballo In The Kitchen will be returned to Texas A&M University for scholarships and student activities. The Dallas A&M University Mothers’ Club takes great pride in contin uous support of Texas A&M through compilation, editing and promotion of publication with spirit! BLACK HISTORY THE TRUE STORY FROM 1200 B.C. TO PRESENT Nov 12 (udder Towel 307 fOOpm Kevin Carreathers Multicultural Services Center TAMU IN COMMEMORATION OF THE NIGERIAN NATIONAL DAY Sponsored By The Nigerian Students Assoc. In Collaboration With The International Students Association Contact Lenses Only Quality Name Brands (Bausch & Lomb, Ciba, Barnes-Hinds-Hydrocurve) $79 00 $99 00 $99 00 STD. DAILY WEAR SOFT LENSES spare pr. only $39 50 STD. EXTENDED WEAR SOFT LENSES spare pr. only $49 S0 STD. TINTED SOFT LENSES DAILY WEAR OR EXTENDED WEAR B5 Spare PR at V2 price with purchase of first pr at regular price! 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