The Battalion. (College Station, Tex.) 1893-current, December 09, 1994, Image 4

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696-3886
FOR ALL YOUR ENGRAVING
NEEDS AND GIFT IDEAS
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CINEMARK THEATRES
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Matinees
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SCHULMAN SIX
2000 E. 29th Street 775-2463
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MOVIES 16
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MOVIES BELOW ARE FIRST-RUN
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Movie schedule good for
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JCLEAR AND PRESENT DANGER (PG-13)
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Page 4 • The Battalion
Friday* December 9,195
Nick Rodnicki/Tin Battalion
Good luck boots
Many students think they will have good luck by placing pennies at the feet of the statue of
Lawrence Sullivan Ross.
Baseball
Continued from Page 1
Zedillo visits troubled Chiapas
TUXTLA GUTIERREZ, Mexico (AP) — New
EYesident Ernesto Zedillo said Thursday on his first
official visit to Chiapas that he was seeking to pro
mote peace by his presence at the inauguration of a
new state governor.
“I come here to express my firm belief that we
must and shall achieve peace and justice through
dialogue, through negotiation,” said Zedillo in a
speech after the inau
guration of Chiapas
Gov. Eduardo Robledo
Rincon.
Some 3,000 anti-gov
ernment demonstrators,
amassed in the state
capital, had threatened
to block the inaugura
tion, but no violence
was reported after the
“I come to Chiapas to reiterate my commitment
to take on the demands of those who suffer in con
ditions of misery ... especially the indigenous com
munities,” said Zedillo in a speech during his brief
visit Thursday.
Zedillo announced that the federal and state gov
ernments have formed a new commission for the de
velopment and well-being of Chiapas.
He said the com-
"I come here [to Chiapas] to express
my firm belief that we msut and shall
achieve peace and justice through di
alogue, through negotiation."
— Ernesto Zedillo, president of Mexico
mission would super
vise efforts to bring
more jobs, govern
ment social spending,
health care and other
programs to this
state, one of Mexico’s
poorest.
Mexico’s new presi-
ceremony. The protesters claimed Robledo won an
Aug. 21 election fraudulently.
Zedillo’s message appeared to be yet another ex
hortation for Chiapas rebels to resume peace talks
with the Mexican government. But rebel comman
der Marcos warned earlier this week that Robledo’s
inauguration would shatter an 11-month-old cease
fire that quieted a New Year’s uprising.
Zedillo said his week-old administration has a
firm commitment to attack the poverty, social injus
tices and discrimination against ethnic Indian com
munities that have inspired violence.
dent said he and Rob
ledo discussed a transition in which both sides
could take part in developing the most rural parts
of Chiapas.
“We all want to build peace and well-being that
Chiapas residents deserve. This means we must al
ways choose the road of dialogue,” added Zedillo, re
iterating that the Mexican Army would continue to
abide by a Jan. 12 cease-fire.
“Before you, I emphatically pledge that the feder
al government will initiate no violent action, or take
any authoritarian steps in Chiapas,” said Zedillo.
“Negotiation is the base for the solution.”
National Football L(
owners used replacement
players in 1987. Attendant:
was way down — averagin;
23,626 a game — but the play
ers abandoned their strike al
ter three weeks of games fea
turing replacements.
Baseball players said the
don’t think fans would payai
tention to replacement games
“It strikes me that you’re
asking a lot of questions th:
are hypothetical,” union heaa
Donald Fehr said. “I don’t give
the questions or answers sign
icance one way or the other.’
The respondents were 6:
adult baseball fans froma
random national poll taken
Nov. 30 to Dec. 6 by ICRSur
vey Research Group of Me
dia. Pa., part of AUS Consul
tants. Results have an error
margin of 4 percent.
While just 19 percentol
women said they would attar
fewer games if replacements
are used, 33 percent of met
said they would go to the ball
park less often. Nineteen per
cent of those 65 and older
would go to fewer games,bol
31 percent of those aged 1841
would attend less often.
Television viewing wouli
be similar, with 21 percentol
women and 33 percentol
men saying they would watch
fewer games.
When asked generally ate
the possible use of replacement
players next spring, 49 percent
of fans were in favor and 11
percent were opposed. Thirty
three percent of fans 65-plns
oppose replacement players,
while 47 percent of those 1841
opposed the concept.
Forty-six percent of those
making $50,000 or more art
opposed, while 38 percentol
those making less than$15,0(1(1
Eire against the move.
Sixty-seven percent of fans
blame both sides for the strike.
21 percent blame players andS
percent blame owners. Amony
fans making less than $15,Odd,
57 percent blame both sides, 11
percent blame owners and If
percent blame players.
4ti on
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