Page 8/The Battalion/Thursday, June 23, 1988 Buy one entree, get second one of equal or lesser value at half price. 268-1414 313 College Main Indoor Soccer Season Starts Soon Summer Special $100 per team Registration dead line-July 5 New hours; Mon.-Sat. lOa.i Sun. 2 p.i i.-IO p. i.-IO p. 3030 E. 29th Suite II 29th St. Emporium 776-2267 CTWP “Best Prices In Town!" Super Summer Special XTTURBO Now! $750 00 Complete System 1 yr warranty parts & labor 8088-2(4.77/8 Mnz.) 512k Ram 360k Floppy 2 hours Free Training At keyboard Monochrome Monitor Monochrome Graphics Parrallel Port 693-8080 2553 Texas Ave. S. College Station Contact Lenses Only Quality Name Brands (Bausch & Lomb, Ciba, Barnes-Hinds-Hydrocurve) $ TQOO pr. *-STD. DAILY WEAR SOFT ' ^ LENSES $0000 pr. *-STD. EXTENDED WEAR SOFT LENSES $QQ00 pr. *-STD. TINTED SOFT LENSES. DAILY WEAR OR EXTENDED WEAR SAME DAY DELIVERY ON MOST LENSES Call 696-3754 For Appointment CHARLES C. SCHROEPPEL, O.D., P.C. DOCTOR OF OPTOMETRY * Eye exam & care kit not included 707 South Texas Ave., Suite 101D College Station, Texas '77840 1 block South of Texas & University TRAFFIC TICKET DISMISSAL Have you had a traffic ticket lately? Do you want to keep tickets off your record? Do you have a good driving record and want to reduce your insurance by 10%? WE CAN HELP! • Convenient Class Times • Group Discussions, Not Lectures • Low Cost - Only $20 (Level 1) NEW EASTGATE LOCATION in College Station. Classes held evenings and Saturdays - call for details! ^•*o: Central Texas Training Institute 123 Walton Drive College Station 693-CTTI World and Nation Iran claims guards stopped Iraqi assault in Mawat area NICOSIA, Cyprus (AP) — Iran claimed Wednesday its Revolutionary Guards repulsed an Iraqi assault in the Mawat region of Kurdistan along the northern frontier, killing or wounding 3,000 men. Iranian rebels based in Iraq said they had withdrawn from Mehran, an Iranian town farther south on the 730-mile border war front, after a three-day offensive in which they reported capturing tanks, missiles and other military hardware worth $2 billion. Tehran radio said at least 15 Iraqi tanks were de stroyed and ammunition dumps set ablaze Tuesday in the Kurdestan battle. There was no independent con firmation and no comment from Baghdad. Iraqi forces in recent weeks have driven the Iranians out of territory captured in southern Iraq earlier in the 8-vear-old war. and have pressed Iranian forces in the Kurdistan mountains of northern Iraq for 10 days. Fighting has increased steadily in the north, where the Iraqis claimed Friday to have recaptured several strategic peaks and the town of Mawat, all seized by Iran last summer. Tehran radio said Iranian fighter-bombers attacked troop and armor concentratons in the Mawat region on Wednesday, “inflicting heavy losses.” On April 16, Iraq seized the initiative in the stale mated land war with an assault that recaptured the Faw Peninsula in southern Iraq, ending two years of Iranian occupation. Dispatches from Tehran said the three-pronged as sault was carried out by Iraqi regulars supported by fighter-bombers dropping chemical bombs. Democracy plays role in program SUMY, U.S.S.R. (AP) — Na- dezhda Nuzhnaya will bid her son and husband goodbye Thursday and board a train for Moscow. This month, the woman who paints tea sets for a living is one of the 5,000 most important people in the Soviet Union. Nuzhnaya, 36, has been chosen to represent her fellow Communist Party members in the northern Uk raine at a national party conference, the first in 47 years, that will pass judgment on a program designed to make Soviet political life more dem ocratic. “This will be one of the most im portant events in my life,” she said. “But it will also be an important event for every Communist, for ev ery citizen of our country.” Nuzhnaya, whose candidacy was supported by co-workers in the por celain factory where she has worked for 19 years, is one of the winners in a Soviet electoral process unlike any in recent memory, but whose choices often seem to differ little from past party elections. Along with Nuzhnaya, fully half of the Communists chosen to rep resent the Sumy region in the south eastern Ukraine are party and gov ernment bureaucrats whose privileges and perks would be deeply affected if the reforms pro posed for the conference are en acted. In recent weeks, protests over bal lot-rigging by party apparatchiks and some of the delegates chosen for the conference has brought Soviet citizens into the streets from the Pa cific Ocean island of Sakhalin to the Baltic republic of Estonia. “By my estimate, 90 to 95 percent of the delegates are of the same type that have attended past party meet ings,” said a diplomat. "True, the other 5 or 10 percent may give us some fireworks.” Who exactly will attend the con ference that convenes Tuesday in the Kremlin is crucial because the more than 5,000 delegates will Ik* asked to vote on proposals that would more firmly separate party from state and limit apparatchiks to two five-year terms in office. In a May 7 speech, Mikhail S. Gor bachev ordered that there be no at tempt, as in the past, to impose quo tas from above for “so many workers, so many peasants, so many woman, and so on.” The sole crite rion, the Communist Party chief in sisted, was that delegates he "active supporters of perestroika." Maryland limit dial-a-porn to subscriber ■f/ol.87h Df ■jj< J I V dn Fr Governoi BALTIMORE (AP) telephone company is instill a new exchange for “dial-a-| and party-line services than available to customers only iijj request, in a twist on effons keep youngsters from having cess to the services. Industry spokesmen sav new exchange could drive services out of business Maryland. “It will infringe on therigliii people who like this enterti—,, merit,” Jonathon Golan saidB c an . tl " the two programs of adult eurl. t< J ) o1 s tainment on 976 lines he opera* ^ 1 i' , in Baltimore. “Their rightswi® 1 ‘ <)KS , t violated because (the newsemjp requires identification.” HI 0 111 ^ The Maryland Public Senl^ mi Wound 100 ami PowmacsrqK P , ms institute the new exchange to® 6 .,, adult and conversation-linese® 111 |' l < ^ ices, which have been available W.n' 1 n , n< 976 numbers. l The d , ev The new 915 exchange, (■ treme K< pected to be implemented h'-W 0 / 1111 "" i r .u r hi ■the natn end of the summer, will bead , i sible only bv customers who asec notified the company they , to have access to it. , Maryland is the first su:;® 1 ' approve the subscription M, d w , change for d.al-a-pornl,nes,BJ[ ou|ld m a man said. Spirts imes Jnad T^,. d services and other intona M d lines will remain on died y hanges, he said. ■nditioned Under the telephone coi®, Fen ny s plan, a customer w »Bv e died <> obtain access to the 915 JE . would have to sign a nite M v form. Names of those signingB-j-^ w forms would he kppt confider^ omi3ted ( the jobl Texas A&M University System Employees Your Body Is A Wonderful Thing. Cover It With Texas Health Plans. ■med Th lorkers ha ■ Tuesday jTempera ■n or tied ■g Kansas ■gree rear ■cord by 7 in Washing |h:n had sto In Chica) hard Ly tors that Texas Health Plans is a Health Maintenance Organization dedicated to providing Texans with quality, affordable health care. New Benefits Primary Care Physician Office Visits .$5 copayment (includes the following services and more) Well Child Care . no charge Immunization .no charge Maternity (pre- and post-natal care).... .$5 copayment for initial office visit Autherrized Referral Specialist visits and care • $5 copayment X rays and lab tests .no charge Medically necessary hospitalization • no charge Lenses and frames or contacts •$80.00 per set Prescription drugs ■$4. 00/Austin $4. 5 0/Bryan-College Station and Waco Police stil Ippearance ■dent, bu pl hopeful toon. RATES Waco, Temple Bryan-Collcge Station Austin • $84.62 $82.87 .$167.50 $174.02 .$255.24 $256.88 Enrollment ends July 15, 1988. For more information, call Texas Health Plans today at: (800) 234-7912 Tfexas Health Plans, Inc, A8 irv a&m eveni in Ac arillo Chur tendt plant nano moth was 1 mer. Kort place drive