Unique Gifts, Indoor House Plants, Decorative Baskets, Silk & Dried Arrangements, and More for Your HOME or APARTMENT contemporary /^Te? landscape services & nursery (tyfordStreet* / RESTAURANT AND PUB Announces Open Saturday Lunch (11AM-3PM) Game Days Sept 15th & 22nd Dinner served from 3pm til 11 pm Join us game day for the finest hickory grilled steaks, blackened red snapper, fresh salads, pineapple chicken and our special prime rib 1710 Briarcest Reservations Bryan 268-0792 coffeehouse returns! poetry...visual art...international music acoustic guitar... comedy... drama frid ay, September 21 rumours, 8:OOpm r a flowerpot of free fun Welcome back Aggies! To celebrate their return, register to win a share of nearly $4,500 in prizes! The excitement at Dillard’s begins Saturday at 10:00 Come to Dillard’s this Saturday and discover what’s new and what’s now. You will find things for the bathroom, bedroom and kitchen, plus a sensational collection of all the newest campus fashions. While you’re here, register to win one of more than 50 prizes. Registration begins at 10:00 and continues until 5:00. No purchase is neces sary and you need not be present or a student to win. • $368.00 in junior apparel from Girbaud, Ignite and Scarlett • $200.00 in fashion accessories by Trifari, Napier and Riviera • $700.00 in men’s fashions from Girbaud, Levi’s® Dockers® Generra, Union Bay, Tommy Hilfiger and more. • $733.00 in housewares and home fashions by Oneida, Presto, Royal Velvet, J.P. Stevens, Croscill, Wamsutta and others. • $1,573.00 in women’s and men’s fragrances and cosmetics by Estee Lauder, Clinique, Lancome-Paris, Elizabeth Arden, First, Bill Blass, Obsession for Men, Grey Flannel and other famous makers. Dillard’s Page 12 The Battalion Friday, September 21, II Aggie football Photo by Huy Ngup Francine Sweet stacks boxes of game programs on a cart for distribution around Kyle Field before the football game. This weekend’s game will be against the University of North Texas on Saturday at 6 p.m. A win against the Eagles would give A&IU a 3-0 record on the season. About 6,000 programs, packed in 136 boxes, were printed. Deficit-reduction plan targets beer, cigarettes WASHINGTON (AP) — In their search for ways to tame the deficit, federal officials are intent on taxing some of life’s little pleasures: beer, cigarettes, jewelry — even your ex pensive new VCR. Although any deficit-reduction plan agreed to by Congress and President Bush is likely to rely chiefly on spending reductions and less sweeping tax changes, it almost certainly would include several tax increases on consumers. Top White House officials and congressional leaders already have reached a tentative agreement on several tax increases that would bring in $59 billion over the next five years. Two-thirds of that would be paid directly by consumers through higher prices for alcohol, cigarettes, airline tickets and a vari ety of higher-priced “luxury” items. Negotiators have been struggling since May to devise a package of spending cuts and tax increases that would reduce the budget deficit by $50 billion during the next 12 months and $450 billion more in the following four years. Although the biggest obstacle to agreement has been President Bush’s insistence on cutting capital-gains taxes, other dif ferences remain. “We’ve made a great deal ofp gress but obviously not enoujl Senate Majority Leader George Mitchell, D-Maine, said beforene; tiations resumed Thursday. Unless agreement is reached- the law is changed — by Oct. 1,1! billion of arbitrary cuts in mostft eral programs will be triggeredas matically. In the meantime, the leader- agreed tentatively to tax increase! alcohol, cigarettes and luxury iterr Beer and wine taxes remainl 1951 levels, although the tax ol quor was raised in 1951 andaja 1985. While negotiators have said exactly how it will be done, have agreed to tax drinkers ana $ 13.6 billion over the next five ye The plan is expected to inert taxes somewhat less than an eaii proposal, which, for example,w; have raised the $1.96 taxonaf: of 80-proof vodka to $2.54; the cent tax on a six-pack of beer cents; and the 3-cent levy ona" milliliter bottle of table wine to cents. The tax on a pack of cigar:: would rise by 4 cents to 20 cents!! year and by an additional 4 cent 1993. Gulf crisis hinders Soviet peace moves MOSCOW (AP) — Convening an international conference to re solve the various conflicts in the Middle East would clear the way for restoring diplomatic ties be tween the Soviet Union and Is rael, a top Kremlin official told the Associated Press on Thurs day. “I think that if there is a con ference on the Middle East, we shall establish diplomatic rela tions with Israel,” Yevgeni Prima kov, a senior foreign policy ad viser to Soviet President Mikhail S. Gorbachev, said. Primakov, in a Kremlin inter view with the Associated Press board of directors and executives, also said his country was willing to help normalize relations between the United States and Cuba, a So viet client state. Primakov’s remarks on the Middle East went beyond what Soviet Foreign Minister Eduard Shevardnadze said two weeks ago w hen proposing a peace confer ence to discuss the Aug. 2 Iraqi invasion of Kuwait, the Arab-Is- raeli dispute and the Lebanese civil war. Shevardnadze said at the time that Moscow would reconsider re lations with Israel if it partici pated in such a conference. Israel and the U.S. govern ment have been cool to the pro posed peace conference, and Pri makov appeared to be holding out the carrot of normal Soviet- Israel ties to make the idea more attractive. “The question of restoration is linked to the process of political settlement in the Middle East,” he said in a wide-ranging interview Relations between Israel anti the Soviet Union, broken aftet the 1967 Arab-Israeli war, ban warmed since Gorbachev came® power in 1985. Primakov, a member of Gorba chev’s newly created presidential council, also warned of a war® response in the Arab world ts Iraqi leader Saddam Husseins demand that Israeli troops will' draw from occupied lands and Syrian troops withdraw fro® Lebanon before Iraq leaves K® wait. “Of course, this way of thin! ing does not satisfy us,” he said “Even in those countries wbost governments are opposed totbf invasion ... the people at largs support that propaganda of Sad dam Hussein. “He does create some prettyst rious support for himself. If no* we manage to make some pr® gress on the Middle East confer ence and link this to the withdrt wal of Iraqi troops from Kuwait this would place him in a dipl® matic “corner,” Primakov said, He said the Soviet Union "t 1 unlikely to accept a request frof- Saudi Arabia to send troops * help protect that country from possible Iraqi invasion. Primakov also said the Cork chev administration wanted ; help ease tension between tlx United States and Cuba. “We’re as interested as * f could be in Cuba becoming a fe tor of stability,” he said. “Ind 11 situation, we are attaching a grt* deal of importance to its relation with the United States.” Hats Offens Facul ByKATHEF Of The Batte The U.S. the Kuwait firm control a Texas A& Dr. Nabil developmer uate study s< Safwat, i United Stat crisis. The purp lenge 20 ret Safwat sa wanted to d of the Unite One mot greed for oi said. “The U.5 A&; B y mike lu Of The Batta Next sen have 150 ne students w due to a $ Li hy a Housto One of t type, the r James H. at Foundation handled by , The func •u accordam Houston cot Vice Pre: Robert L. other schola SHOP DILLARD'S MONDAY THROUGH SATURDAY 10-9; SUNDAY 12-6; POST OAK MALL, HARVEY ROAD AT HIGHWAY 6 BYPASS, COLLEGE STATION. MASTERCARD, VISA, DINERS CLUB, CARTE BLANCHE, AMERICAN EXPRESS, DISCOVER AND DILLARD'S CHARGE CARDS WELCOME.