Page 8/The BattalionThursday, September 29, 1988 El Chico located by Wal-Mart in Bryan 3109 Texas Ave. SONORA DINNER > EL CHICO PARTY DAY IEESE ENCHILADA, SOUR ISAM CHICKEN ENCHILA- (25 lR,SPANISH RICE AND RE- FRIED BEANS/^s^TTT tliepi THIS THURSDAY SMALL MARGARrrAS-75£ $4.95 : EL CH ICO: B glidonly at participating restaurant*, gtvalid with any other olter. Otter expires Oct.8 HAPPY HOUR IS ALL DAY 1 EVERY THURSDAY 1 tfw LADIES & LORD^l * at < T e? C cl s 707 T Large Selection of ‘B'RJ'D'ES'MSU'DS 'IXRIESS'ES and rrux'E'Dos ‘To ‘Purchase or %snt S\t Prices ‘Below Our Competition WE gZLSLKPW&E'E FT! 764-8289 (We guarantee to beat our competition’s price on identical merchandise!) 'AsIlaBout our discounts for the entire wedding party. M-Sat. 10-6 Thurs. till8:00 (ne^t to Audio ‘Video) det;! Foo; Next to the Dixie Chicken The Durango Doj 45 chili,cheese onions,mustard jalapenos,chips I iiipPjBlue Bell Ice Cream single scoop u/ith purchase of any hot dog and this coupon 25C Sunday Special! Call us when the dining halls are closed. 12” 1 item pizza or 16” 1 item pizza $4. 95 ! $6.“! No coupon necessary. Prices do not include tax. Limited Delivery Area 260-9020 4407 S. Texas 693-2335 1504 Holleman Amplicon Financial ;O0t r6 v/ 'MEER OPPORTUNITIES IN Financial Marketing Amplicon Financial is an innovative marketing and commercial finance organi sation dedicated to meeting the demands of the nation’s leading companies for ligli technology equipment. By employing an aggressive, well-trained telemar- (eting staff, Amplicon provides customers with a low cost alternative to the typ ical in-person sales presentation. hs an account executive with Amplicon, you will prospect new accounts from our established lead sources. You will be negotiating lease terms, conditions, and economics with financial officers of corporations located throughout the United States. To qualify you need to demonstrate that you are a hard working individual, an outstanding University graduate, financially motivated, and career oriented. offer a comprehensive training program covering all aspects of the leasing industry, including tax and accounting regulations, contract negotiation, pricing, ligh technology product training and sales techniques. Compensation is salaried during three months training period, and thereafter, $22,500/year plus commission. First year's expected earnings: $35,000-pius. For more information contact your College/University Career Placement Center or send your current resume to the address below. Amplicon Financial 2020 East First Street, Suite 401 Santa Ana, California 92705 Attn: Human Resources Department (714) 834-0525 ONLY SERIOUS INQUIRIES PLEASE. World and Nation Textile bill gets Reagan veto WASHINGTON (AP) — Presi dent Reagan on Wednesday vetoed legislation designed to toughen curbs on textile, apparel and shoe imports, arguing it would have disas trous effects on the economy at a time when exports are booming. Only minutes after rejecting the textile measure in private, Reagan went before television cameras in the Rose Garden to sign a bill paving the way for a multibillion-dollar free- trade zone with Canada. In both cases, Reagan said he was acting to lower prices for consumers and to ensure jobs for workers. The textile bill, intended to pro tect American industries against for eign competition, won final congres sional approval last Friday. But Reagan, in a veto message re leased by the White House, said, “This bill represents protectionism at its worst.” The measure won congressional approval without the two-thirds margin needed to override a veto, and White House spokesman Marlin Fitzwater expressed confidence that Reagan’s veto would be sustained. The president lavished praise on the Canadian free-trade agreement, calling it a hallmark of free trade and the antithesis of the textile mea sure he’d just vetoed. But the treaty has no force as yet because it is bottled up in the Ca nadian Senate and its fate depends on the outcome of the Canadian election. “Protectionism does not save jobs,” Reagan said in his veto mes sage. He contended the textile bill would have disastrous effects on the U.S. economy. “It would impose needless costs on American consumers, threaten jobs in our export industries, jeopar dize our overseas farm sales and un dermine our efforts to obtain a more open trading system for U.S. ex ports,” Reagan said. “At a time when American ex ports are booming, the United States must not embark on a course that would diminish our trade opportu nities,” he added. The president called the textile and apparel industries the most pro tected sector of our economy and said they were undeserving of fur ther aid. Reagan charged that prices would climb and break the clothing bud gets of many American families if the legislation took effect. With every move that has arisen on Capitol Hill to strengthen textile imports, Reagan has pledged to veto any resulting legislation. The bill would do the following: • Freeze textile and apparel im ports at 1987 levels this year and limit growth to 1 percent annually starting in January. • Freeze imports of non-rubber footwear with no provision for in creases. • Impose import quotas on 180 categories of textile products and 30 types of footwear, a system that would be reviewed after 10 years. • Set up a one-year program un der which the government would auction off import licenses and set a special quota for silk neckties. The House approved the bill on a vote of 248-150 on Friday. Earlier this month, the Senate approved the measure, 59-36. Communists meet amidst anticipation of policy change MOSCOW (AP) — The Commu nist Party’s policy-making body will meet Friday to overhaul the coun try’s political structure and make high-level leadership changes, Soviet officials said. The plenary session of the 300- member Central Committee had been expected by October to discuss amendments to the Constitution and expanding elections to include mul tiple candidates. The changes are key to Soviet leader Mikhail S. Gorbachev’s goal of taking the 20 million-member Communist Party out of the day-to- day management of the economy and having it focus on ideology and policy goals. The Central Committee session had been planned for a long time, but the specific date had not been set. When the announcement was made, Soviet Foreign Minister Edu ard A. Shevardnadze and other So viet officials rushed back home from trips abroad. “There will be changes in the working of our political structure,” Foreign Ministry spokesman Gen nady Gerasimov told reporters at the United Nations in New York, where Shevardnadze was attending the General Assembly session. “He has to cut it short, unfortu nately,” Gerasimov said. “The ple nary will be devoted to reorganiza tion of the party apparatus, including the Central Committee it self.” Soviet media did not carry any re ports about scheduled high-level Communist Party meetings or about Shevardnadze’s travel plans. In Moscow, two Soviet sources dis missed speculation of an emergency or that the meeting concerned the Soviet withdrawal from Afghani stan. They spoke to reporters at a re ception at the U.S. Ambassador’s residence. “There is no crisis,” one highly placed source in Moscow said. He spoke on condition of anonymity. As a member of the 13-man Polit buro, Shevardnadze would attend any meeting of the Central Commit tee. All committee members who are abroad, including a number of am bassadors, were summoned, Gerasi mov said. “The plenary will be devoted to reorganization of the party appara tus, including the Central Commit tee itself,” he said. Valentin Falin, head of the gov ernment press agency Novosti, told a reporter at the ambassador’s recep tion that Shevardnadze would at tend the regular meeting of the Communist Party’s ruling Politburo on Thursday. The second source, however, said Shevardnadze would not arrive in time for the Politburo session and was returning to Moscow to attend another meeting on Friday. He re fused to say what body would meet Friday. Falin said the meeting Shevard nadze would attend was being called to discuss political reforms mapped out at the 19th party conference in Moscow June 28-July 2. He declined to specify the topic. On July 29, the Central Commit tee adopted a timetable for over hauling the Soviet political system. The first deadline set was October, by which time the Central Commit tee said a draft law on amendments to the Soviet Constitution and on multi-candidate elections of legis lators was to be completed. In a speech last Friday, Soviet leader Mikhail S. Gorbachev said the Politburo would soon convene to re view the draft law. A meeting of the parliament, the Supreme Soviet, will then be con vened to discuss the measure, Gor bachev told media executives, ideo logical workers and heads of cultural and artistic unions. By year’s end, the party is to have reorganized. The Central Committee is em powered to make personnel changes in the Politburo. At the 19th party conference, one delegate suggested that holdovers from the 18-year ten ure of Soviet president Leonid I. Brezhnev be eased out of the lead ership. The delegate specifically named President Andrei A. Gro myko, 79, and fellow Politburo member Mikhail S. Solomentsev, 76, as leaders who should retire. The Brezhnev era is now widely condemned as allowing rampant corruption and decay of the Soviet economy and making mistakes in foreign policy. As part of the political reforms adopted at the party conference, the office of president would be strengthened from its now largely figurehead status. World briefs Congress wants cuts in physician fees BOSTON (AP) — A top-to- bottom reorganization of physi cian fees, requested by Congress, could raise the pay of general practitioners by 70 percent while cutting some surgeons’ income in half, its author said. If adopted by private and gov ernment insurance programs, the long-awaited plan would sharply increase the pay for office visits while reducing fees for surgery and other procedures, such as in stalling pacemakers. The plan’s architect, economist William C. Hsiao of the Harvard School of Public Health, contends the current system is unworkable and unfair, short-changing doc tors for day-to-day management of their patients while paying them far too much for exotic tests and other highly technical work. He said his proposed fee struc ture will change doctors’ financial incentives, and this will alter the way they practice medicine and ultimately improve patient care. “You can predict that under the new system, doctors will be willing to spend a lot more time with patients to examine and counsel them,” Hsiao said. “Right now, physicians are being penal ized financially for spending time with patients.” Guilty verdict given to drug trafficker LOS ANGELES (AP) — A Mexican drug trafficker was found guilty Wednesday of aid ing and abetting the 1985 con victed torture murderer of a U.S. drug agent and his pilot. He was the third person convicted in the case, which strained U.S.-Mexi can relations. Jesus Felix Gutierrez, 38, was found guilty by a federal jury of helping Mexican drug baron Ra fael Caro Quintero escape to Costa Rica after the brutal 1985 murder of Drug Enforcement Administration agent Enrique Camarena and his pilot, Alfredo Zavala Avelar. Felix’s attorney had contended there was insufficent evidence to convict the former Los Angeles seafood store owner and sug gested the government altered evidence. The key evidence against Felix was the testimony of a govern ment informant who said he heard the defendant discuss his role in arranging Quintero’s es cape. Prosecutors also showed ju rors entries on Felix’s passport in dicating he had preceded Quintero to Costa Rica and left after Quintero arrived. Earlier, jurors convicted Renee Verdugo Uruidez and Raul Lo pez Alvarez of conspiring and participating in the kidnap-mur- ders of Camarena and Zavala. Iran jolted by 300th quake in five weeks NICOSIA, Cyprus (AP) — An earthquake registering 4.6 on the Richter scale shook southwestern Iran, and Iran’s Islamic Republic News Agency said Wednesday that it was about the 300th quake to jolt the nation in five weeks. The agency, monitored in Nic osia, made no mention of casual ties or damage in Tuesday night’s quake in the town of Mamassani in southwestern Far province. But it said seven people have been killed or injured and 2,000 houses destroyed in a series of quakes that began Aug. 23. Another tremor, registering 2.8 on the Richter scale, shook the city of Garmssar, 60 miles southeast of Tehran, early Wednesday, IRNA said. No cas ualties were reported. Officials confiscate radioactive milk MANILA, Philippines (AP) — Officials raided a suburban ware house Wednesday and confis cated 4,600 cans of powdered milk suspected to have been con taminated by radioactive fallout from the 1986 Chernobyl nuclear accident in the Soviet Union. Health Secretary Alfredo Bengzon, who led the raiders to a warehouse in the Manila suburb of Paranaque, said the imported milk was part of a shipment of da iry products returned to Western* Europe in 1986 after the acci dent. He said he ordered an investi gation into how part of the ship ment was sent back to the Phil ippines.