NOW 3 LOCATIONS Page 4/The Battalion/Monday, August 29, 1988 Northgate Redmond Terrace Jersey Street (across from Post Offics) (next to Academy) (Southgate) LOU POT'S OPEN STAURDAY & SUNDAY CTWP “Best Prices in Town!” Super Summer Special XTTURBO Now! $750 00 Complete System 1 yr warranty parts & labor At keyboard Monochrome Monitor Monochrome Graphics Parrallel Port 8088-2(4.77/8 Mnz.) 512k Ram 360k Floppy 2 hours Free Training 693-8080 2553 Texas Ave. S. College Station jazzerclse ►ONE WEEK FREE (NEW STUDENTS ONLY) ►SEMESTER RATES AVAILABLE ►NO MEMBERSHIP FEE MW 4:30* & 5:35* TTH 9:15* & 6:00* Sat 9:00 am *Childcare Available Jazzercise Studio Welborn @ Grove (1 block South of Jersey) 776-6696 764-1183 Serving B-CS for 9 years Beat the Heat with a Sonic Treat! Nothing takes the sizzle out of Sum mer like Sonic Happy Hour Monday-Friday 3:30-4:30 College Station 104 University 696-6427 Bryan 914 S.Texas Ave. 779-1085 I! T ^ 15 : '“T >,i:: ''''' r '' ' * htei*iS|§f i" t ■fgsHllS'' i>4!5 it-'i BATTALION CLASSIFIED PULLS! Call 845-2611 SSSffiiSSS Sii World and Nation Iran accuses Iraq of stalling talks iMcA GENEVA (AP) — Iran accused Iraq Sunday of stalling peace talks and said the negotiations to end their eight-year war “could drag on for years.” The two countries resumed talks after a one-day break “for reflec tion,” but both sides remained far apart over the disputed Shatt-al- Arab waterway and other key points. Iraq accused Iran of blocking the peace process by “making ground less accusations” against Baghdad. Sunday’s talks began with sepa rate consultations between U.N. Sec retary General Javier Perez de Cuel lar and Iranian Foreign Minister Ali Akbar Velayati and his Iraqi coun terpart Tariq Aziz, U.N. officials said. “It is not a deadlock and it is mov ing,” Francois Giuliani, spokesman for Perez de Cuellar, told reporters. “The secretary-general would like the talks to move faster but there is no sense of frustration, dismay or despondency.” Iran’s official Islamic Republic News Agency said Perez de Cuellar suggested setting up an impartial committee to identify the aggressor in the Iran-Iraq war and to release its Bentsen’s voting at odds with party WASHINGTON (AP) — Twenty- seven times this year Sen. Lloyd Bentsen has voted against the major ity of his Democratic colleagues in the Senate on a variety of issues, in cluding Star Wars, abortion and im migration policy, and some of his votes put him at odds with his run ning mate, Michael Dukakis. When 77 percent of Senate Dem ocrats voted on Feb. 4 against grant ing $60 million to rebels fighting the Nicaraguan government, Bentsen was on the opposite side. On July 13, 75 percent of Democrats voted against allowing oil drilling in parts of the eastern Gulf of Mexico, but Bentsen voted for it. Those votes were an exception for the Texas senator, who now is his party’s nominee for vice president. During 17V2 years in the Senate he has usually been found in the middle of the pack. Of 212 substan tive votes Bentsen has cast this year, 185, or 87 percent, sided with the majority of Democrats. In 1987, Bentsen voted on 408 roll calls, and 90 percent of the time — on 365 votes — he sided with most other Democrats. Averaging his annual ratings by the Americans for Democratic Ac tion and the American Conservative Union would produce a lifetime score that pleased liberals 38 percent of the time and conservatives 41 per cent of the time. Bentsen’s record is under question now because on certain issues the Democratic vice-presidential nomi nee is at odds with the head of the ticket. The most current: aid to the re bels in Nicaragua. Dukakis has re peatedly called U.S. government support for the rebels “a failed and illegal policy.” Most of Bentsen’s votes have been for financial aid. “We have to keep the pressure on the Sandinistas,” Bentsen has said, referring to the leftist government in Nicaragua. Dukakis favors federal financing of abortions. Bentsen calls the issue one of the toughest for him but gen erally supports federal money only in the case of rape or incest or when the mother’s life would be endan gered by carrying a baby to term. On the basic question of abortion, Bentsen says, “It’s a woman’s right to make that decision after consulting her physician, and hopefully her pastor or priest.” Dukakis apparently is unequivo cally opposed to capital punishment. Bentsen has voted for it, most re cently on May 16, when the Senate approved the death penalty for cer tain drug-related murders. More than half the Democrats opposed that bill. 1987, Bentsen opposed an amend ment prohibiting firearms that can not be detected by airport security devices. Seventy-four percent of Democratic senators voted for the amendment. Dukakis and Bentsen appear un concerned about their differences. “I didn’t pick Lloyd Bentsen to be a clone of Michael Dukakis,” the presi dential nominee explained. “We agree on most things but we disagree on some. Bentsen was in the minority on April 20 when the Senate, on a 61-35 vote, killed an amendment that would have required a balanced fed eral budget before any financial rep arations could be paid to Japanese- Americans interned during World War II. Only eight other Democrats were with Bentsen on that vote. Bentsen gives Quayle praise during show Sen. Lloyd Bentsen said Sunday that Sen. Dan Quayle probably could grow into the job of being president if it became necessary. It was the faintesjt of praise from a 67-year-old Texas Democrat seeking to contrast his experience with that of a 41-year-old Indiana Republican — and to make the difference a ma jor issue in their campaign for vice president. Appearing on NBC’s “Meet The Press,” Bentsen was asked whether Quayle was qualified to be president. “Frankly, he would not have been on my short list as I look over my Senate colleagues,” said Bentsen. “He obviously was on the short list of the hard right.” “Now, I wouldn’t say that he couldn’t grow into the job; he proba bly could. But if a tragedy befell a president, you’d have to be able to move in immediately and take over and do what has to be done in facing whatever issues that confront you at that time.” Among the four candidates, Bent sen dominated the public political stage Sunday. Dukakis favors handgun control; Bentsen is on the other side. On the most recent vote on the issue, in Quayle attended church in Sacra mento, Calif., and then made the cross-country flight home to Wash ington for a couple of days of rest and planning for this week’s swing through Louisiana, Arkansas, Mis sissippi, Alabama, Florida, Georgia and South Carolina. O rt hoQ/|edic ssociates Douglas M. Stauch, M.D., P.A. James B. Giles, M.D., P.A. Mark B. Riley, M.D. Board Certified Are Pleased to Announce the Relocation and Expansion of their Office to Brazos Valley Medical Plaza 1602 Rock Prairie Road, Suite 360 College Station, 693-6339 (Eff. 9/12/88) On active staff at both local hospitals ARTHROSCOPY • ARTHRITIS TOTAL JOINT REPLACEMENT SPORTS MEDICINE LUMBAR DISC SURGERY HAND SURGERY & FOOT DISORDERS Effective September 12, 1988 findings by the end of November. The report, monitored in Nicosia, was confirmed by Western diplo mats. Iran has insisted that Iraq be branded the aggressor. Iraq invaded Iran in September 1980 after border skirmishes. IRNA said the three-man commit tee would be headed by a member of the International Court of Justice in the Hague, the Netherlands. Iran and Iraq each would send a liason of ficer, it said. Perez de Cuellar called for a “day of reflection” Saturday after both sides set out their divergent posi tions Friday. He said he hoped “flex ibility will start on Sunday.” The talks between Velayati and Aziz are the first official contact be tween the two sides since war broke out in September 1980. Sources close to the negotiations said the talks were delayed Sunday morning because some members of the Iraqi delegation Hew to Baghdad for consultations. In Tehran Sunday, Iran’s deputy foreign minister, Javad Mansouri, accused Iraq of undermining nego tiations by claiming sovereignty over the disputed Shatt al-Arab way. He also repeated Iran’s der, for formation of an impartial# to determine which side starteil war. Iran says Iraq must be bn the aggressor before there cai| lasting peace. “Iraq continues to havedesin Iran’s territorial integrity,’’ souri was quoted as saying by IlJ The pace of negotiations slow, he said, “that they maydtj| for years.” In Baghdad, the off leal AM Pan J for Lac horiza daily accused Iran of'hi! ing the process of peace bym tony tl groundless allegations” againsiljileoi It called on Iranian leaders to) themselves of the historic! nity ... to establish a lasting,! prehensive pace.” “I’m | ijf Lao irked am tl Ton The key problem in negotiaul imes has been the question of sovertiJ andc over the Shatt-al-Arab waterway, boundary between the twonatio# Baghdad demands sovelaj over the entire channel, whichis tually its only outlet to the sea. World briefs lexico He 1 lalley IcAlle jept. 3 j&mten |om 1 eater ‘Killer bees’ heading for United States TAPACHULA, Mexico (AP) —Africanized “killer bees” are spreading north and will arrive in the United States in less than two years despite efforts to stop them or alter their behavior, officials make less crops less e§ say. The bees killed one resident of Tapachula, a town near the Gua temalan border, when a man tripped on an unseen hive. They also have harassed herds of cattle and made grazing difficult. The Africanized bees are de scendants of African bees that es caped during an experiment in Brazil. They mate with local bees, spawning new generations that are more aggressive and danger ous to handle, and pollinate ciently. “M exico will be ‘Africans: without a doubt. It is a facut cannot change,” said Dr. Marik Noemi Zapata, president of tk Tapachula Agricultural Associi tion, in a recent interview. Sb said the bees will continue nonl “as far as the cold allows.” “Hundreds of hives migrate!) the north, but we don’t knowta many,” beekeeper Gil Tobia! said. Since honey is Mexico's second biggest agricultural export, tht invasion has researchers search ing for ways to protect the indus try. Law limits time banks can freeze funds WASHINGTON (AP) — Start ing this week, a new federal law will put limits on the number of days that banks and other finan cial instutions can place holds on checks which customers deposit in their accounts. The law has been hailed by consumer groups, who charged that Americans were losing mil lions of dollars annually because banks were freezing funds for undue amounts of time. Banks, however, complain that the new guidelines are confusing, proving costly to implement and will subject them to greater risks of fraud. The controversy is being up by the Expedited Availability Act, which stirred Funds goes into effect Stmt Under the la\< batiks, saving and loans and cre&t unions mid give customers access to def ited funds within one, three seven days, depending on type of check. While many banks have lx operating voluntarily undersutl deadlines, consumer groups ar gued that a law was needed be cause too many banks were free! ing funds for periods as' two weeks even though 99 pei- cent of the time they were geitinf credit for the money within tw days. Graffiti artists join Denver program Hoping curb the spread of graffiti, the city of Denver has brought 60 to 70 graffiti artists into a program that gives them artistic tips and a sanctioned place to display their spray-painting skills. The construction walkway at the new Denver convention cen ter will be the canvas for partici pating “taggers,” known for their stylized signatures, and “writers,” who specialize in flashy murals. “Graffiti started in prehistoric days (with cave writings) . . . but it didn’t really become vandalism until someone owned the walls,” says Amy Lingg, communications director lot die Denver Depan merit of Public Works. Lingg, who got her artisii training at the Colorado limit* of Art, is supervising the cit) 1 ’ anti-graffiti program. Taggers and writers bar emerged from underground t work on “pieces” (short for im terpieces) in a makeshift studioat a Public Works facility. Working on boards donated^ convention center contract® Hensel-Phelps and using donated spray paints (Krylon is thegrf artist’s favorite), taggers and writ ers are coached by artists fn the Denver Art Museum’s nei| borhood artists program. 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