FREE HAIRCUTS!!! Page 6 The Battalion Tuesday, July 25, 1989 PAID ADVERTISEMENT BECOME A SUPERCUTS MODEL-BY APPOINTMENT ONLY Gorbachev labels coal strikes as test of nation’s reforms Accidental Discovery May End Obesity JNNaSnp Wednesday, jy|v 9:00 p.m. at TheGit Our licensed cosmetologists will cut your hair July 24-28 with all the style you de- mand-at no cost. Just call 696-8600 for Appointment. LONDON $335 PARIS $345 ROME $399 MADRID $349 TOKYO $508 RIO $380 SUPERCUTS ONE WAY FROM HOUSTON ALSO TEACHER and BUDGET FARES! 1519 S. Texas Ave. College Station EURAIL PASSES USSR / Europe Tours Language Learning Centers Men, women Minimum Shampoo cut. children, age 10 years. at home day of Councffllravd .1-800-777-2874_ $1 .OO OFF! Lunch Buffet for $2.99 7 days a week ALL YOU CAN EAT offer expires 08-04-89 The best pizza in town. 1 268-BEST Courtyard Apartments 600 University Oaks 696-3391 • SWIMMING POOL •HOT TUB •CLUB ROOM •LAUNDRY ROOM •24 HOUR MAINTENANCE •SHUTTLE BUS •VOLLEYBALL, TENNIS & BASKETBALL COURTS •SPACIOUS 1 & 2 BEDROOM APARTMENTS (flat & studio) •SPECIAL MOVE IN RATES NEAR CORNER OF HARVEY RD & STALLINGS DR-BEHIND POST OAK BANK MOSCOW (AP) — President Mik hail S. Gorbachev said Monday the strikes in Soviet coalfields were the biggest test of his four-year eco nomic reforms — worse than the Chernobyl disaster — and he called for a shake-up of local councils often blamed for blocking progress. Gorbachev had appealed last week for a “renewal” of Communist Party ranks from top to bottom, and his suggestion that local governing bodies also be transformed could mean sweeping leadership changes. Local elections scheduled in the spring throughout the Soviet Union involve multiple candidates and for the first time offer serious chal lenges to entrenched officials. Speaking to the national legis lature, the Supreme Soviet, Gorba chev said party and government bodies as well as official trade unions should meet urgently to analyze the two-week strike that at its peak idled half the Soviet Union’s one million coal industry workers and deprived vital factories of fuel. The Kremlin chief told legislators that almost all the miners have' re turned to work. “We are coming out of a very se rious crisis, the biggest test during the four years of perestroika,” Gor bachev said. He said the test was even more se vere than the April 1986 explosion and fire at the Chernobyl nuclear power plant that killed 31 people, cost millions of dollars to clean up and sparked a nationwide environ mental protection movement. The strikes dealt a serious blow to the economy, Gorbachev said, but he reassured his countrymen that “our perestroika will give results despite the tests we are undergoing.” He blamed Coal Ministry and lo cal officials rather than the miners, but warned, “deciding such ques tions by striking will ruin our work.” In Washington, White House spokesman Marlin Fitzwater de clined comment on the Soviet strikes and violence between ethnic groups in some Soviet republics. “We don’t think it’s appropriate to get involved in trying to tell them how to conduct their internal prob lems and issues,” Fitzwater said. Communist maverick Boris N. Yeltsin told the Supreme Soviet that local party and government leaders have been inactive and insensitive to people’s needs because “they know they won’t be re-elected.” Gorbachev said that because of the strike, governing councils should not wait for elections to make changes. “Ripe questions require sessions without delay to discuss reports of regional executive committees, and where it is necessary to make person nel decisions, they must be taken without waiting for elections,” he said. Several heads already have rolled, Tass official news agency reported. It said the party chief and mayor of Stakhanov in the Donetsk Basin “were forced to leave their posts,” apparently under pressure from strikers. SCHULMAN Fa THEATRES Bush requests Congress approve defense budget including stealth bomber WASHINGTON - Obesity may be controlled naturally with a new type of pill, discovered by accident, a research scientist confirmed recently. In studies, scientists noted an unusual side effect. Patients receiving an ingredient in what is now being called FS-1 all lost weight, while body weight in control groups remained constant. Scientists say the mechanism behind the weight reduction is not clear, but suggest it is partially due to a decrease in the intestinal absorption of calorie-rich dietary fats. Although scientists forsome time have known of substances with the capability of producing this effect, the dramatic impact on weight reduction was not known until recently. The director of research and development at National Dietary Research, an organization committed to the investigation and research of nutritional solutions to world-wide health problems, stated, "The mechanism by which FS-1 works to decrease body weight is actually a more complex and sophisticated process called nutri-bonding. When chewed and swallowed immediately before meals, FS-1 releases nutrients with low calorie content into the body, while high-calorie fats are eliminated, thus providing optimum nutrition and a minimum number of calorics." Studies with FS-1 indicate weight loss resu Its clearly su perior to products currently available for the treatment of obesity. In a comparative study by NDR, whose research topics have been the subject of articles published In recent medical and nutritional journals, FS-1 was found to be the most effective treatment for obesity and the most acceptable to patients. The discovery comes as welcome news to thousands of obesity sufferers waiting years for this type of breakthrough. According to a spokesperson at NDR, "FS-1 can be made available to the public immediately, because it is not a drug and contains only natural ingredients recognized as safe. A drug with essentially the same weight loss capabilities might take as long as eight years to be available, due to lengthy delays encountered in the approval process. "FS-1 is currently available on a limited basis through physicians and pharmacies. An instruction sheet for proper use and optimum results is provided with each bottle of 100 tablets. kinko's the copy cen te|r 201 College Ms 84 6-8721 f Time's Running OO BARGAIN MATINEE ALL SEATS BEFORE 6PM NO MATINEES ON MON.-FRI. 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Work Smart. Work Simply... With Hewlett-Packard! WASHINGTON (AP) — Presi dent Bush appealed to Congress Monday to accept his call for billions of dollars for the B-2 bomber and Star Wars as lawmakers squared off in initial skirmishing on a defense blueprint for the year. Speaker Thomas Foley predicted the House would pare Bush’s call for $4.7 billion for the so-called stealth bomber for the fiscal year that be gins Oct. 1. He said the plane “will survive in some form of limited pro curement.” Bush summoned lawmakers to the White House and Foley offered his prediction as both houses began work on differing versions of de fense legislation. Debate was ex pected to consume several days in both houses. Facing growing opposition to the stealth bomber, Bush personally lob bied members of the Senate Armed Services Committee and other lead ing senators, urging support for the “revolutionary plane with revolu tionary technology.” “We need the utmost flexibility in terms of arms control,” the presi dent said, dismissing complaints about the bomber’s high price tag — $70 billion for 132 planes, or $530 million each. On Capitol Hill, Vice President Dan Quayle conceded that the Pen tagon should have released the cost estimates on the bomber earlier than it did. The bomber program, shrouded in secrecy for 10 years, has become more public with the release of figures last month and the air craft’s first flight last week. “Those numbers should have been revealed publicly a lot sooner tougher fight in the House than in the Senate. Sen. Sam Nunn, D-Ga., chairman of the Senate Armed Services Com mittee, said the Senate could expect a difficult conference fight with the House over the defense budget. At the start of Senate debate, Sen. James Exon, D-Neb., a member of the Armed Services Committee, pro claimed that the “unchecked defense budget is history.” Ellison Pharmacy 2706 Texas Ave. Bryan, TX 409-823-0029 Battalion Classifii 845-2611 Domino’s claims it puts safety above timeliness AM/PM Clinics CLINICS Minor Emergencies Weight Reduction Program 10% Discount With Student ID Minimal Waiting Time College Station bom 845-4756 693-0202 779-4755 IcuTFiere than they were,” Quayle told report ers during a meeting in his congres sional office. “It would have made (the political battle) a lot less compli cated and much easier.” The vice president, who plans to spend Tuesday lobbying for Bush’s version of the defense budget, indi cated that the administration faces a ANN ARBOR, Mich. (AP) — Domino’s Pizza Inc., accused of en dangering motorists as its drivers hustle to make deliveries within 30 minutes, will begin telling its side of the story on its pizza boxes. The nationwide publicity cam paign will focus on Domino’s claim that it puts a premium on speed in its kitchens, not on the streets. In a letter to be attached to 21 mil lion Domino’s boxes, company Presi dent Dave Black writes in part, “Yes, a 30-minute delivery is important, but safe delivery is more important.” The campaign follows a lawsuit filed in Pittsburgh by a couple who claim they were injured in a collision with a Domino’s delivery car and that the store manager was more concerned about haste in delivery than the accident. The store manager rushed to the scene and said: “Let’s get this pizza on the road,” according to the law suit filed earlier this year by Frank and Mary Jean Kranack. The company has denied the alle gation that the manager was more worried about the pizza than the wreck. Defensive Driving Course! July 26, 27 & August 2, 3 College Station Hilton For more information or to pre-register phoo 693-8178 24 hours a day. cut here PEKING P EXPRESS MAGNIFICENT CHINESE BUFFETS Over 20 Selections of Salads & Entrees, Iced Tea, Desserts Bye II System check will delay launch of space shuttle r dC For Only w/coupon Dine-ln Only Reg. $3.89 & $4.19 11:00-2:30, 4:30-8:30 Mon-Fri. 11:30a.m.-8:30p.m. Sat. & Sun. One coupon per person per visit. Valid July 25-July 31, 1989 Not good with any other offer. LlJmjoIk. ALL YOU CAN EAT $6.49 606 Tarrow 764-8960 -i no $37.50 $65.00 $60.00 $82.50 $132.50 on! ::::::::::::: $37.50 $37.50 $45.00 $52.50 $82.50 $176.25 4Tcv $132.00 A\cx • $186.75 42S $90.00 HEWLETT mL'EM PACKARD AUTHORIZED HEWLETT-PACKARD DEALER 505 Church Street • College Station, Texas (409) 846-5332 CAPE CANAVERAL, Fla. (AP) Next month’s launch of space shuttle Columbia likely will be delayed at least a day because of a possible stuck fuel valve in a power system, NASA said Monday. The space agency had said last week that Aug. 7 was the earliest possible date for launching the shut tle with a classified Defense Depart ment payload. Shuttle managers are to start a two-day review Tuesday, leading to the selection of a firm launch date after all aspects of the mission have been assessed. The trouble with the valve was de tected early Monday following the brief launch pad test firing of all three of Columbia’s auxiliary power units. Radio data indicated one of two hydrazine fuel valves leading to APU No. 2 was stuck open when it should have been closed. The APUs provide power for moveable control surfaces such as wing flaps, the speed brake and rud der. $50 $50 $50 $50 $50 $50 $50 $50 $50 $50 $50 $50 $50 $50 $50 $50 $50 $50 PAINFUL MUSCULAR INJURIES Individual with recent lower back or neck pain, sprain, strains, muscle spasms, or painful muscular sport injury to participate $SI in a one week research study. $50 incentive for those chosen to participate. i $50 $50 $50 $50 $50 $50 $50 $50 $50 $50 NASA said at first that the faulty unit would be replaced, a procedure that would delay the launch two or three days. But officials said later they were not certain the valve was stuck open and they wanted to run some leak checks on the system to determine exactly what was wrong. Those checks will be run Wednes day, and if they disclose the valve is stuck, the unit will be replaced. The tests probably will delay the launch at least a day, officials said. 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