April 19,19$ Thursday, April 19,1990 The Battalion Page 7 >e pimp ;e in iooths I — Japanese pW i the yellow page, for the next!,, ne booths, rs, generally the, l, advertise numh ubs.” dubs are osteiuj police are t tein. uter train station Fokyo area, dojg ■ interior of setej eaturing the pin a popular shamp, ■red an evening minutes for 20,1 boast of speci4 ■taries, school^ n down, and it( ght up again,'® taki, a spokes,; egraph and main phone coj F branch office; >kyo, tried to figl jooths with a set, ked in a glue-resis Film had some sac re pasted on tin ed by convention^ wledges that NTl side of the slide; ;l pimping arele- asting up thestiel, tor. ■y has long hath stry which enjojst le atmosphere. tore informatioi wtimes. ited R. Showtime Ninja Turtles nes are 5,7 and! PG-13. Showtime <. THREE Oak Mall. Gal ore information /times. Rated R. Stac ks. Rated PG-i!. and 9:15. ed R. Showtimes AN SIX 2 E. 29th Streei nore information es” and weekend h of July. Rated 1. Rated G.Shoss- 1:25. Rated R. Shoic- i:55. Rated R. Shots- ig. Rated PG-11 and 9:45. Rated PG-11 and 9:40. HREE n at 226 South- I 693-2457 for >ber. Rated PC. 9:45. eath. Rated R. ,nd 9:35. ty. Rated PG, nd 9:30. E THREE r East Mall. Cal iformation. d R. Showtimes ill. Rated PG 9:30. wtimes are 7:05 Sitting between the lines Photo by Phelan M. Ebenhack An employee of R.E.C. Industries connects beams to the renovation of the Langford Architecture building Wednesday. Welcome (Continued from page 1) the A&M campus in two limousines with a police escort. Nikolav Shishlin, of the Soviet Union and also part of the dis cussion, was scheduled to arrive in College Station Wednesday night. Adelman and ABC News anchor Sam Donaldson, moderator of the discussion, are scheduled to arrive in College Station on Friday. Shishlin is a Communist Party central committee spokesman and advisor to the Politburo. Wieland is a member of the Ger man Democratic Republic Foreign Ministry and an ambassador for dis armament. Erdos is a member of the Hungar ian Foreign Ministry and head of the Department of International Multi lateral Relations. Trzeciakowski is a member of the Council of Ministers and a Solidarity economic advisor. Adelman is the former director of Arms Control and Disarmament Agency under President Reagan. “The Changing Faces of Commu nism” will be at 8 p.m. Friday in Rudder Auditorium. Tickets cost $4,$6 and $8 for stu dents and $6, $9 and $12 for non students. Tickets are on sale at the MSC Box Office and all Ticketron outlets. Women (Continued from page 3) man who regards women as daugh ters. He tends to distrust women with responsible projects. Then there is the False Liberator or Fake Mentor, male or female, who is more interested in proving Census (Continued from page 1) disappointed that this one is so poor ” Tom Murray, associate director of student affairs at A&M, said the Census Bureau did not publicize the census adequately to dorm students. “We asked for some posters and . some pretty good publicity to accom pany the forms,” Murray said. “And all they provided were a couple of notes saying, ‘Please return to your residence director by such-and-such date.’ So I don’t think the publicity was as good as it could have been.” Basmann, who is dealing only with dorm students, cadets, athletes and members of fraternities or soro rities at A&M, said little can be done to force students to complete and re turn the forms. In an effort to get more students’ to participate in the census. Census their liberation than providing job opportunities. “They’ll use you as a shingle,” Ste- panek said. These categories aren’t all bad, she said, but they may push a woman into a position where advancement is difficult or impossible. “Overt discrimination is a thing of We asked for some posters and some pretty good publicity to accompany the forms ... I don’t think the publicity was as good as it could have been.” — Tom Murray, associate director of student affairs Bureau workers on Wednesday be gan phoning students who had not returned their forms, Basmann said. She' said Census Bureau workers might have to go door to door, even though it is a time-consuming proc ess. the past,” Stepanek said. Covert dis crimination, however, still exists. Identify the problem, she said, and then try to negotiate it. “Be professional, act confident and do good work,” she said. “(But) the most effective way to deal with all this is to get to be the boss.” “Well, we’d like to avoid that,” Basmann said. “It’s a very inefficient way, considering that we can't get into most of those places without ad vance notice and keys.” Basmann said Census Bureau workers, many of whom are em ployed only temporarily, will work through next week in an attempt to contact students who have not com pleted the census. She said all students should com plete a census form because statistics derived from the census can influ ence funds received by local govern ment bodies. “This makes more money for Texas A&M because they use these figures when they work on grants,” she said. “And (it provides) more money for the community for roads and streets and things, and they use them to develop housing projec tions.” Diplomats (Continued from page 1) called “very inefficient enterprises,” dismiss workers and restructure their operations. The currency exchange is a major problem hindering a quick reunifica tion of the two Germanys. West Ger many does not want to exchange its Deutschemark one-to-one with the East German Ostmark because the Ostmark is much lower in value and would send inflation rates soaring. “There will be a lot of social prob lems,” Wieland said. “The people of the GDR are afraid of the price in crease.” Wieland said it could be late 1991 or early 1992 when the two Ger manys are reunited. He said the first steps will be to agree on a common currency, then to negotiate with the United States, Soviet Union, France and England on foreign diplomacy questions. Although both leaders agree the United States has a role to play in both East Germany and Hungary’s future, their opinions differed on what that role should be. Erdos said Hungary must receive foreign economic assistance to ease the transition to a more open market and hopes the United States govern ment encourages private companies to invest in his couptry. “On our own, it would be impossi ble to address the difficult economic situation we are in,” Erdos said. “We need not only an interest, but an ac tive participation in helping to over come the legacy of the recent peri od.” The Soviet Union has said it would like a reunited Germany to be neutral, but Wieland said it would be reasonable for a united Germany to be part of NATO. He did say, however, U.S. troop reductions are in his country’s plans. “The United States has the capac ity to influence European progress in the direction of overcoming more and more East-West confrontation,” he said. Some countries, including the United States, Israel and Poland, have expressed fears about a power ful reunited Germany, but Wieland said the fears are unfounded. “I don’t think other people have to fear what’s going on in Germany,” he said. Recently, the newly-elected East German Parliament apologized to the Jewish people for the Nazi Holo caust, and it has declared its commit ment to honor Poland’s eastern bor ders as they were prior to World War II. Erdos said the rapid changes in the Eastern European countries from a Bolshevik system to a demo cratic society are virtually unprece dented and have overwhelmed him and many other people. “I believe that we’re living in his toric times,” he said. “I believe the years 1989 and 1990 will go down in history books in golden letters be cause such developments of this kind, of such a depth, of such a di mension, happen very rarely in the history of our countries.” Thursday, April 19 & Saturday, April 21 Rudder Auditorium 7:30 PM / 9:45 PM Saturday, April 21-Midnight Rudder Auditorium Admission is $2.00-All Shows Tickets are available at the MSC Box Office. Aggie Cinema Movie Information Hotline—847-8478 Gone With the Wind Saturday, April 20 2:00 PM Rudder Theatre Admission $2.00 Children under 13 $1.00 \agci NEMA/ Aggie Cinema Movie Information HotUne: 847-8478 Back to the Future II Apr. 20/21 7:30/9:45 $2.00 Young Frankenstein Apr. 20/21 Midnight $2.00 Gone With the Wind (restored)... Apr. 21 3:00 $2.00 Children under 13 - $1.00 Tickets may be purchased at the MSC Box Office. TAMU ID required except for International features. GREAT LUNCH at a GREAT PRICE All You Can Eat Salad, feuLi Breadstyxz & Pizza only 326 Jersey 696-DAVE 211 University 268-DAVE BUFFET HOURS 919 Harvey Rd. 764-DAVE 11 AM - 10 PM SUN & MON Carter Creek 846-DAVE 11 AM - 2 PM TUES-SAT MUNCHIE IUNCHIE Ask for your Munchie Lunchie Punch Card re co a> re CO 0) re if)