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Texas next to The Edge Cut 8c Style included $39 95 696-Tech KAPPA SIGMA LITTLE SISTERS George Rausch Jason Thompson Joey Soto Ron Villareal Cheyenne Minick Brad Bracken Mark Murray Brent Leger Brent Miller Greg Westmoreland John Simons Jeff Reynolds Fred Wilson Tony D’Elena James Hickey Richard Howard Lance Morton Wilkes Branch Monte Williams Tate Abel CONGRATULATIONS SPRING ’88 PLEDGES Tuxedo Sale from... $99.50 Tie & cummerbund sets from ...$9.95 Tuxedo shirts from $14.95 All other accessories 30-70% off through Feb. 20 10 a.m.-6 p.m. Culpepper Plaza Call Battalion Classified 845-2611 Page 12The Battalion/Thursday, February 18, 1988 Bush, Dukakis bask in victory after primaries Associated Press Republican George Bush and Democrat Michael Dukakis exulted in their impressive New Hampshire primary victories Wednesday while the rest of the presidential field jock eyed for position in a campaign without clear, commanding front runners. And with the delegate-rich prima ries just ahead in the South and else where, there was no danger of peace breaking out among the combatants. “I think you’re seeing a mean George Bush,” said Sen. Bob Dole, who blamed his defeat in New Hampshire on distortions he said were spread by the vice president’s campaign. “I’m not going to run from it. I’m not known for running from a fight.” Tennessee Sen. Albert Gore Jr. dismissed his Democratic rivals as “peas in the same pod” who had staked out positions to appeal to the voters of Iowa and New Hampshire and who would be rejected in the Southern primaries next month. Dukakis disputed that, just as Bush denied Dole’s accusation of foul play. “We’re going to surprise some people” in the South, said the Massa chusetts governor as he headed for a day of campaigning in Dixie. “Our message of strength, of opportunity for the future is going to do very well there.” While most of the field worried about raising money and gaining momentum, there were others who had possibly fought their last. Former Arizona Gov. Bruce Bab bitt returned to Washington after his fifth-place Democratic finish and seemed a likely candidate for with drawal, although the odds were against his endorsing another con tender. Even so, he clearly hadn’t lost his desire for the White House. “The only cure for the presi dential disease is embalming fluid,” he said, quoting fellow Arizonan Mo Udall, himself a presidential also- ran. There was fresh talk that the muddled races might produce no clear winner before the nominating conventions, particularly on the Democratic side. New York Mayor Ed Koch said he thought the Democrats would draft a nominee, either New York Gov. Mario Cuomo or New Jersey Sen. Bill Bradley. But Democratic national chair man Paul Kirk predicted the con vention would pick a winner on the first ballot from among the active contenders. Bush, who won in New Hamp shire after first watching his support hemorrhage when Dole captured the Iowa caucuses, said he was tak ing “nothing for granted” from here on out. The vice president denied Dole’s charges, and said he had proven he had staying power by rebounding from his third-place finish in Iowa. “The system worked,” he said. “You can take them on the chin, you can get up and you can fight again.” Schultz to meet with Sakharov on Moscow trip WASHINGTON (AP) — Secre tary of State George P. Shultz will meet with noted Soviet dissident An drei D. Sakharov on his trip to Mos cow next weekend to underline U.S. support for the human rights movement. Sakharov, winner of the Nobel Peace Prize in 1975, is a physicist who helped develop the Soviet hyro- gen bomb in the 1950s. His subse quent outspoken support for human rights led to his banishment to the closed city of Gorky in 1980, until he was allowed back in Moscow in 1986. Shultz will hold wide-ranging talks Sunday with Foreign Minister Eduard A. Shevardnadze, then meet with General Secretary Mikhail S. Gorbachev and Shevardnadze again on Monday. World Briefs Fire causes evacuation of embass) MOSCOW (AP) — Soviet fire fighters chaperoned by Ameri cans extinguished a fire Wednes day in the U.S. Embassy, the aging building the United States has been unable to abandon be cause of bugging devices that per meate a new structure. About 150 embassy employees were evacuated and sent home lor the day, embassy si Richard Gilbert said. No injured. U.S. Embassy offirials viet firefighters were out the fire in an ui filth-floor residential ter they decided embassy nel couldn’t extinguishiti own. Man surrenders after killing seven SUNNYVALE, Calif. (AP) —A former employee of a Silicon Val ley defense contractor fatally shot seven people Tuesday and wounded five others at the com pany’s offices, including a woman who had spurned him, authori ties said. The man, identified by police as Richard Wade Farley, 39, sur rendered after barricading him self inside the building for about six hours. Three officers grabbed him as he walked out with his hands in the air and he was taken to the Santa Clara Count) nearby San Jose. Employees dove under and inside closets as the shot his way into theESl building, witnesses said. As the siege continued, negotiators talked by td with the man, who‘‘expi little remorse” forhisai Lt. Tom Moore of the Si Public Saf ety Department Seven people were Alex Michaelis, conti the safety department. Agreement ends students’ takeovs AMHERST, Mass. (AP) — A six-day occupation of a University of Massachusetts building by mi nority students ended Wednes day after protesters and the school’s chancellor agreed on re forms to correct alleged racial ha rassment on campus. The takeover ended just 1k*- fore 1 p.m. when 150 minority students walked onto the steps of New Africa House and began to sing a gospel song, them their fists in a victory The five-page agreenffl worked out between Cha Joseph Duffey and nineti protesters late Tuesday* lowing nearly four bounw tiations. I he pact includeda i c hange the school’s stun duct code to allow sus[ students found tocontti racial violence orharasJlif Academy reveals Oscar nomination BEVERLY HILLS. Calif. (AP) —“The Last Emperor,” a pan oramic drama of modern China, scored top honors with nine nom inations Wednesday in an Oscar race that included Cher, Robin Williams and Michael Douglas but overlooked directors Steven Spielberg and James L. Brooks. “Broadcast News,” the corn- edy-romance set in a television news bureau, followed with seven nominations including those for stars William Hurt, Holly Hunter and Albert Brooks. James Brooks was nominated as producer and writer, but, not as director. Spielberg’s “Empire ui Sun” tied “Fatal Attbp “Me xmstruck” with sis nations, but Spielbergs mentioned for directons the film makethebesliBK Joining ‘‘BroadcastS« “The Last Emperor," in story of China's lastmomit contenders for best pictii “Fatal Attraction," “Hii C .lory" and "Moonstrud' The Academy Awards to the Shrine AuditogB April 1 I after a 40-veanti |) 1 he ceremonies will beltfl on the ABC network. SHOP DILLARD S MONDAY THRU SATURDAY 10-9, SUNDAY 12-6; POST OAK MALL. HARVEY ROAD AT HIGHWAY 6 BYPASS, COLLEGE STATION 764-00H. AMERICAN EXPRESS CARD WELCOME. TEXAS • OKLAHOMA • ARIZONA • NEW MEXICO