MB MM HHHn Mil Hi I cut here I MM MM MM MM MM MM I Defensive Driving Course Page 12/The Battalion/Wednesday, April 27, 1988 April 29, 30 & May 4, 5 College Station Hilton World and Nation For information or to pre-register phone 693-8178 24 hours a day. HH MM MM MM MM MM I CUt here | MM MM MM MM MM MM I Two soldiers, three guerrillas BOTHER’S BOOKSTORE Sell Your Books Now For Cash & Spin Our Wheel of Fortune 304 Jersey 901 Harvey die in firefight on Israeli border $7. 00 off 20” 3-item pizza valid thru 4-30 16” Pizza for the price of a 12” valid thru 4-30 Call 76-GUMBY 764-8629 PIZZA FAST, FRESH, HOT AND DELIVERED FREE Hours Sun-Wed: 11 a.m.-1:30 a.m. Thur-Sat: 11 a.m.-2:30 a.m. COMING SOON ...another special service for Texas Aggie Credit Union members and it is FREE! TOUCH TONE TELLER Soon, keeping in touch with your money will be as easy as picking up your telephone and calling 696-4649. You can transfer funds, check your savings or checking balances, see if a check has cleared and much, much more You talk directly to the credit union computer system It’s like having a teller machine right in your own home or office! If you are already a member watch your mail for details. If you're not a member and are eligible call 696-1440 or stop by our offices to find out about this and the many more special services available at your Texas Aggie Credit Union. TEXAS AGGIE CREDIT UNION 301 Domiruk Dr College Slalion TX 77840 ( 409)696-1440 Insured by the National Credit Union Administration (NCUA) Coupon INTERNATIONAL HOUSE PANCAKES, RESTAURANT $2.99 Mon: Burgers French Fries Tues: Buttermilk Pancakes Wed: Burgers St French Fries Thun Hot Dogs St French Fries Fri: Catfish Nuggets St Fries Sat: French Toast Sun: Spaghetti St Meat Sauce ALL YOU CAN EAT $2" 6 a.m. TYo take outs • must present this ad M MM Ml Mi Mi mm Mi Expires 5/1/88 Rooty Tooty $2 49 2 eggs, 2 pancakes, 2 sausage, 2 bacon good Won.-Fri. Anytime International House of Pancakes Restaurant 103 S. College Skaggs Center JERUSALEM (AP) — Israeli troops on Tuesday tracked down and attacked a band of Arab guerril las infiltrating from Lebanon into Is rael. Two Israelis and three guerril las were killed, authorities said. Two other Israeli soldiers were wounded in the firefight. One was in serious condition with a bullet wound to his chest, authorities said. The attack in the rocky terrain and scrub brush near the Lebanese border was the bloodiest border clash since Dec. 8 when Palestinian riots began in Israeli-occupied terri tories to the south. In the Gaza Strip, meanwhile, the army blocked hundreds of Palestin ians from reaching jobs in Israel by confiscating their ID cards and re quiring them to undergo checks at government offices. The government also temporarily revoked the press credentials of two foreign journalists, Martin Fletcher of NBC and Glenn Frankel of the Washington Post, for failing to sub mit their dispatches to military censorship. The border attack began before dawn when Israeli soldiers on a pa trol discovered footprints northeast of the town of Kiriyat Shimona, an army spokesman said. For several hours, troops lit the skies with flares and searched for the intruders, the spokesman said. The soldiers found the guerrillas about 200 yards inside the border and opened fire. The guerrillas responded by hurl ing hand grenades and firing a rocket, the spokesman said. 5-year-old boy tells preschool students he has AIDS virus LAKEWOOD, Colo. (AP) — Five- year-old Jonathan began his first day of preschool Monday by telling his seven classmates he has AIDS. “He said, ‘This is my oxygen, and I have a disease. My bad blood could kill you,’ ” said Sheila, the child’s mother, who took her son to the spe cial education class at Patterson El ementary School. sons, she has asked that her last name not be published because she fears retaliation against her family. Jonathan, who uses a portable ox ygen tank to assist in breathing, sur prised his mother by volunteering the information as the other chil dren were introducing themselves, she said. “He addressed it up front,” she said. “He didn’t wait for anything. And the kids responded really well. He broke the ice right off and from then on it was just normal kid stuff.” A divorced mother of three other “They listened and they played with me,” Jonathan said of the hour he spent in the classroom. Asked whether his first day was as much fun as he expected, he replied sim ply, “Yeah.” The two talked with reporters outside the family’s condominium in Lakewood. Reporters and photogra phers were not allowed inside the classroom at the request of the other students’ parents. Jonathan is the state’s first re corded child victim of the fatal dis ease, his mother said. The youngster contracted AIDS from tainted blood he received in a transfusion shortly after birth and was diagnosed in June 1985. World Briefs Saudi Arabia breaks relations with Iran RIYADH, Saudi Arabia (AP) — Saudi Arabia accused Iran of terror ism and subversion and broke rela tions Tuesday, ordering all Iranian diplomats to leave the kingdom within a week. A statement broadcast by state- run television and distributed by the official Saudi Press Agency cited a riot by Iranians during a pilgrimage to Mecca last year in which hundreds of people died, a subsequent attack on the Saudi Embassy in Tehran and attacks on commercial shipping in the Persian Gulf. On Sunday, Iranian speedboats attacked a Saudi-owned tanker in the Strait of Hormuz. UN condemns murder of PLO leader UNITED NATIONS (AP) — The Security Council on Monday con demned the assassination of the PLO’s military commander and the United States abstained, allowing the resolution to pass 14-0. The resolution did not accuse Is rael of killing Khalil Wazir, the sec ond in command in the PLO, but Is raeli sources and Tunisian officials have said Wazir was slain by Israeli commandos. America frequently has used its veto power as one of the council’s five permanent members to block resolutions criticizing Israel. Polish steelworkers strike for more pay WARSAW (AP) — Hundreds of steelworkers in southern Poland went on strike for more pay Tuesday as laborers’ frustrations over rising inflation boiled over for the second time in two days. Other workers threatened a walk out at a heavy machinery plant to protest the firing of two leaders of the indepencieni Solidarity trade union for leading a protester’s rally. On Monday, a strike by 2,800 transit workers in the western city of Bydgoszcz shut down buses and trams for 11 hours, forcing provin cial officials to boost hourly wages more than 60 percent. It is the first major protest since 1981. Non-OPEC nations offer oil-export cut VIENNA, Austria (AP) — Seven independent oil-producing nations, seeking to help OPEC boost oil prices, proposed late Tuesday that both groups temporarily cut their exports by 5 percent, Mexico’s oil minister said. Rilwanu Lukman, the Nigerian president of the 13-nation Organiza tion of Petroleum Exporting Coun tries, called the offer “a good begin ning.” Analysts said the proposal, if im plemented, could at least temporar ily reverse the recent decline in oil prices caused by excess supplies. A soldier involved in the clash said troops and guerrillas were six feet away from each other when the fighting began. “They were hiding on a deep slope inside a maze of trees,” the sol dier, who would not give his name, told Israel radio. “It was not possible to see them. From inside the maze the terrorists opened fire.” belonged to the Syrian-backed Dei ocratic Front for the Liberation Palestine led by Naif Hawatme Later Tuesday, Hawatme’s said the attack had occurred in Isi and that 12 Israeli soldiers hadbei killed. But both the Israeli army Lebanese police said just two soldiers and three guerrillas killed. I-'. hr Lebanese police spokesmen in Beirut said the seven-man guerrilla ring belonged to two pro-Soviet groups, the Lebanese Communist party and the Popular Front for the Liberation of Palestine led by George Habash. But an Israeli military official told Israel radio that documents discov ered on the guerrillas showed they The incident marked the filtration or attempted infiltratu since Nov. 25, when a lone euertil landed a hang glider in northern rael and attacked a military base, killed six soldiers in a hail of i i.m Us hctoi c being shot todeatl Israeli officials nave linked thei tempts to the uprising in the ten® ties. National Briefs Crew tests gases inside submarine NORFOLK, Va. (AP) — Sail ors boarded the disabled subma rine USS Bonefish drifting off the Florida coast Tuesday and be gan testing and pumping out what they said appeared to be toxic gases inside, a Navy spokes man said. Earlier Tuesday, 19 of the 22 sailors injured in Sunday’s explo sions and fire were discharged from a hospital in Jacksonville, Fla. The five-man boarding crew planned to continue its work th roughout the night before any effort was made to enter the sub marine, said Lt. Fred Henney, a spokesman for the Atlantic Fleei in Norfolk. Groups agree to ban plastic handguns WASHINGTON (AP) — Ihe Reagan administration and law enforcement groups agreed Tuesday on compromise legis lation to ban undetectable plastic handguns, using an approach that has been staunchly opposed by the National Rifle Association and its legislative supporters. Joseph A. Morris, director of the Justice Department’s office of liaison, said me proposed legis lation would be sent to Congress this week. The compromise represents a change in position for Attorney General Edwin Meese III, who earlier endorsed the NRA ap proach. Panel wants warning on acne drug ROCKVILLE, Md. (AP) — A federal advisory committee de clined Tuesday to recommend withdrawal of a popular acne medication known to cause birth defects in pregnant women. However, after reaching that unanimous decision, the panel of outside experts asked the Food and Drug Administration to look into the legality of requiring some restrictions on how the drug, Ac cutane, is prescribed and taken. It also adopted a series of rec ommendations to strengthen the warnings supplied to doctors who prescribe the drug and to word more clearly the warnings given to patients themselves. Economy grows during first quarter WASHINGTON (AP) — Strong spending by American consumers helped the economy grow at a healtny 2.3 percent an nual rate during the first three months of 1988, the government said Tuesday, dispelling fear of any lingering ill effects from the October stock market crash. The Commerce Department, in its first look at overall eco nomic performance this year, said consumer spending, the big gest surge in business investment in more than four years and growing exports kept the gross national product rising despite declines in government spending and housing construction. “So much for the recession that was supposed to occur in the first quarter,” Commerce Undersecre tary Robert Ortnersaid. Fitzwater: U.S. wants to cut gulf action WASHINGTON (AP) — Presi dent Reagan’s spokesman sug gested Monday that the adminis tration wants to return U.S. forces in the Persian Gulf to lim ited rules of engagement. While emphasizing that no de cisions have been made on how American naval power will be used, spokesman Marlin Fitzwa- ter said, “Everybody acknowl edges that we need to move bad to some more limited set of rules.” The talk of a change in policy came as a result of the mining ofa U.S. frigate and last Monday’s ex tensive fighting between Iranian and U.S. forces. Teller machine users keep free cash NEW YORK (AP) — Your bank cash machine has gone ber serk, giving out $20 bills as if they were fivers, yet your receipt shows no sign of overpayment. Do you use the emergency tele phone to alert the bank, or do you take the money and run? If you chose the first option, you are a rare breed of cat, judging from an unintentional ethics experiment staged Sunday at a Manhattan bank branch. Because some hapless bank employee loaded a canister of P bills into the slot for $5 bills, an accidental exercise in income re distribution took place. Although the cash machine panel has a 24-hour telephone for reporting problems outside hank hours, there were only “one or two calls,” bank spokesman Robert Nolan said. Instead, a line of eager card holders quickly formed at the ma chine. UPA University Pediatric Association 1328 Memorial Dr. • Bryan Full Range of Medical Service for College Students including Gynecological Services (Dr Kathleen Rollins) VTSA- Call for appointment 776-4440 7 a.m.-7 p.m. extended hours for illnesses only William S. Conkling, M.D.,F.A.A.P. Kenneth E. Matthews, M.D.,F.A.A.P. Jesse W. Parr, M.D.,F.A.A.P. Kathleen H. Rollins, M.D.,F.A.A.P. Robert H. Moore, M. D.,F, A.A.P. 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