Take a step now toward your future ... ^ Page 8 y'V/'t v'tf/H Join MSC Public Relations! Learn skills that can impact your career. Director and Committee Applications Available Now at the SPO Room 216 MSC Extended Deadline: Wednesday October 25, 1989 For more information call 845-7627 The Battalion GOVERNMENTAL OPPRESSION AND REFORM IN GUATEMALA FMrm/vqqmrmAiA/v- pf?£W£A/mt eAmpatp- FATHER ANDRES GIRON mmM, oewsfp & 201/WgC ~ SAVE <10 Classic loafe New SA.$L Tripad™ Comfort. loafers in a class by them selves. To introduce you to true comfort in a slip-on, we are offering both our SAS Kiltie and Penny at a special savings of $10 for one week only. No limit. Traditional styling in classic handsewn loafers. Leather uppers. Leather lined. Leather soles. Tripad™comfort for the ball and metatarsal area of your foot. Fit and comfort you'll feel from the minute you slip them on. Kiltie and Penny Features MEN'S PENNY Handsewn Leather Sole Cushioned Heel Full Leather Upper Lining Handlasted Leather Uppers Cushioned Arch and Metatarsal Feature SAS Factory Shoe Store Park Plaza 1800 S. Texas Ave. (Harvey at S. Texas Ave.) College Station 693-3173 STORE HOURS: Monday thru Saturday 10-6 Sizes 6'15 in widths S, N, M, W. Available in Cordovan and Black. Monday, October 23, City shuts down shelter San Francisco angers many by moving victims of earthquake to make room for plastic surgeons SAN FRANCISCO (AP) — The shutdown of a shel ter for earthquake victims to make room for a conven tion of plastic surgeons has angered some of the dis placed and brought an angry defense by Mayor Art Agnos. Most of the 1,000 people housed in the Red Cross shelter at the huge Moscone Convention Center were moved Sunday to the Presidio army base and to a Navy transport ship, allowing time to prepare for the Ameri can Society of Reconstructive and Plastic Surgeons’ con vention Oct. 30, city officials said. The relocation angered residents of the Tenderloin district, where hundreds of elderly and impoverished people were evicted from damaged transient hotels af ter Tuesday’s devastating 6.9-magnitude quake. “They should have the plastic surgeons postpone it for a week and let people get over this earthquake,” said Keith Holyfield, 28, an unemployed man in a stained shirt and tattered green-and-yellow Oakland Athletics’ cap who waited outside the Moscone Center on Sunday. “I’m still shaking from this quake.” The center is within walking distance of thelenfel loin’s cheap cafes. The Presidio and the USS PeleliuJ Pier 30, are miles away, closer to the swanky C|j House restaurant and Fisherman’s Wharf. The city’s chronically homeless, the estimated 6,fe I who live year-round in doorways and warm themsdic| over garbage can fires, said it took a disaster for thee / to open an emergency shelter. “Why does it take an earthquake for a bum to pi; cup of coffee?” said Harvey Roberts, an unemploje! accountant who has slept at Moscone Center since 4 quake. “The shelter, it’s a luxury,” said Holyfield, whoslep on the street until the quake raised his standard ofi, ing by making a cot available in the convention hall hi room. Mayor Agnos disputed the accusations that them does not normally provide adequate shelter. He salt San Francisco already pays for 2,900 hotel rooms; night and that the city needs convention and touns revenue. Mandela’s wife reclaims role as prominent, defiant activist SOWETO, South Africa (AP) — The government banned her, the anti-apartheid movement censured her and potential legal battles cloud her future. But Winnie Mandela has survived and is reclaiming her role as one of South Africa’s most promi nent and defiant activists. Mandela, 55, wife of jailed Afri can National Congress leader Nel son Mandela, vanished from public view in February when leading anti apartheid groups repudiated her and accused her self-appointed bodyguards of waging “a reign of terror.” In recent weeks, however, Man dela has emerged with high-profile appearances at several opposition rallies. The relentless speculation about her husband’s release, ex pected within several months, keeps her at the center of the political stage. “She is blunt, rash, emotional and speaks from the heart — that is why people respond to her and why she is controversial,” Fatima Meer, au thor of a best-selling biography about Nelson Mandela, said. “Even during the crisis, Winnie had the support and loyalty of many, many people,” Meer said in an inter view. “She will remain highly visible and widely respected.” gotiate with the white-led govern ment. Nelson, who is visited frequently by his wife, reportedly told her not to talk to the press. She remained si lent for several months but has be gun to speak out again. There has been no formal pul reconciliation between Winnie am the anti-apartheid movement, k the overt criticism of her hi; stopped. “I am of no significance to any body as an individual,” she told Tribute Magazine. “To attack me is to attack (Nelson) Mandela, to attack the ANC.” Several anti-apartheid leaders, m eluding some who earlier de nounced Winnie for “violating k man rights in the name of tit struggle against apartheid,” refusec recently to speak about her on tit record. Brady’s political stock rises after market crash When six of Nelson’s closest ANC colleagues were freed from prison Oct. 15, Winnie accommodated one, Wilton Mkwayi, at her home in So weto, the huge black township out side Johannesburg. She appeared that day at a rally lor the freed pris oners. The releases are widely seen as a trial run for freeing Nelson, 71, pos sibly the world’s most famous pris oner. His release is considered nec essary before black leaders, even relatively conservative ones, will ne- WASHINGTON (AP) — In the aftermath of the Friday the 13th stock market dive, Treasury Secre tary Nicholas Brady’s political stock has risen for successfully avoiding the pitfalls that ensnared the Reagan administration two years ago. Before the crisis, the low-key Brady tended to pale in comparisons with his predecessor, James A. Baker III, now secretary of state. But in spearheading the govern ment effort to prevent the Crash of ’87 from repeating, Brady is winning praise for deft handling of the situa tion. “It was clear that the government stood prepared to help prevent a re peat of that 508-point debacle,” Al len Sinai, chief economist of the Bos ton Co, said. “The policymakers all said the right things and helped to contain any problems.” by an 88-point rise the next Mondu That success notwithstandk Brady hinted in an interview Fri4 that he may soon recommend se« ral steps aimed at promoting n coordination among regulators, would not be specific about wk changes were being considered In a free enterprise system, ernment policymakers are notiw essarily concerned with imposk rules that inhibit the normal ebba flow of market forces. But they an concerned when other factors-] ticularly those unique to the speed, computer driven the modern era — threaten to t dermine or overwhelm the natural forces. When the market dropped 108 points on a Friday two years ago, it followed with a 508-point plunge the next Monday. This time, Friday’s 190-point decline was largely offset In addition to directing the fad finding operation that insured: supply of accurate information upc: which to base decisions during ik market plunge earlier this monii Brady worked to have all gover ment policymakers, from the pre dent on down, speak with one void to project an air of calm. E. German media report problems BERLIN (AP) — In a crowded East Berlin subway train, commuters shake their heads in disbelief as they flip through the Communist Party newspaper Neues Deutschland, its pages brimming with workers’ com plaints and admissions of official bungling. Less than a week after reform-resistant party leader Erich Honecker was forced out of office, East Ger many’s news media have shed their drab and doctri naire image and given voice to unprecedented debate over the troubled nation’s problems. Although there is still no legal alternative to the state- run press, government media have begun to respond to the widespread calls for broader, more realistic news coverage. A day after Egon Krenz took over as party leader last week, Neues Deutschland devoted four pages to critical examination of the nation’s problems, including the flight of more than 55,000 East Germans to the West For the first time in their 40-year history, East fe | many’s media have offered prompt coverage of tit| pro-democracy street protests and other oppositi | events. On Saturday, two senior Communist Party offidail engaged in an unusually candid debate withEastfoB mans who had just marched through downtown Berlin in demand of reforms. Less than two hours late I footage of the heated exchange between East Bethl party chief Guenter Schabowski and Mayor ErlH Krack was shown on the nightly news show ‘ Aktue j Kamera.” East German television now routinely broadcastsijj interviews with state officials, who were rarely seer f few weeks ago and whose policies were never quel tioned openly. Grants Available for Student Organizations and Academic Departments Jordan Enrichment Program Cycle B is for organizations wishing to secure funds for the 1990-1991 academic year. Grant program is open to all recognized student organizations and academic depart ments of Texas A&M University (College Station) planning cultural, educational, social or recreational activities with an international subject matter. $3,600 is available to be granted in Cycle B. Recipients must give the MSC Jordan Institute recognition for partial funding on all pro gram advertising. Most grants will not exceed $1,000. Applications Available Now in room 223G MSC Browsing Library. Due by 5:00 p.m. Thursday, October 26,1989 MSC Jordan Institute for International Awareness L.