The Battalion. (College Station, Tex.) 1893-current, October 20, 1977, Image 8

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    Page 8 THE BATTALION
THURSDAY, OCTOBER 20, 1977
Knowledge is your best
protection.
^.Corl Bussell's
X/fliAMOND Room
3731 E. 29th 846-4708
Town & Country Center
MEMBER AMERICAN GEM SOCIETY
CASUAL FASHIONS
for
GUYS & GALS
TW DRAWER
Culpepper Plaza
MANOR EAST THEATRE
Held Over for 2nd Week
7:40
9:40
THE BAD NEWS BEARS ARE ONE YEAR OLDER
AND ONE YEAR WILDER
THEBAONEWS
MANOR EAST 3 THEATRES
MANOR EAST MALL 823-§300
BAD NEWS BEARS
IN BREAKING TRAINING
7:40-9:40
STAR WARS
DOLBY 4-CHANNEL STEREO
7:30-9:55
GREASED LIGHTNING
7:20-9:30
Skyway Twin
822-3300
ROLLERCOASTER
PLUS
EARTHQUAKE
EAST
ONE ON ONE
PLUS
BREAKHEART PASS
Campus
COLLEGE STATION
SLAP SHOT
FRI.-SAT. MIDNIGHT
DUSTIN HOFFMAN
THE GRADUATE
ALL SEATS $1.00
Smithsonian
gains jewel
for collection
United Press International
WASHINGTON — The Smithso
nian Institution’s gem collection has
acquired a 75-carat emerald worth
more than $100,000. It once was the
centerpiece of a Turkish sultan’s
belt buckle.
The flat, oval gem, the size of a
50-cent piece, was donated by
Mrs. Stewart Hooker of New York,
sister of former U.S. Ambassador to
Britain Walter Annenberg, the
wealthy publisher.
Mrs. Hooker bought the gem
from Tiffany’s in New York about 15
years ago and wore it as a brooch
surrounded by 13 carats of
diamonds.
Smithsonian gem curator Paul
Desautels said the jewel probably
came from India and belonged to
Abdul Hamid II, one of the last Ot
toman sultans who reigned until
1909 when he was exiled.
Qbc) INTERSTATE
PARAMOUNT PICTURES CORPORATION
Paramount Pictures Presents
THE BAD NEWS BEARS
IN BREAKING TRAINING
WILLIAM DEVANE clifton james
Written by PAUL BRICKMAN Based Upon Characters Created by BILL LANCASTER
Produced by LEONARD GOLDBERG Directed by MICHAEL PRESSMAN
A PARAMOUNT PICTURE
m COLOR
j
Sip into something
UNIVERSITY SQUARE SHQ£EiMi_C£NI£S_S46^714&84^^^^
Secrets kept hidden foi
lOO years are no
revealed i
DAY ]
5
7:30,9:30
mi
Lincoln' ^ J
Conspiracy ^
IVIA II Starts TOMORROW
The Only Thing More
Terrifying
Than The Last jff £
12 Minutes §■>.
Of This Film
Are The First 80. 4*? f
FRI. 7:30,
9:25
able
So smooth. Easy to sip. Delicious!
Comfort®’s unlike any other liquor.
It tastes good just poured over ice.
That’s why it makes mixed drinks
taste much better, too.
Southern
Comfort
great with:
Cola • Bitter Lemon
Tonic • orange juice
Squirt...even milk
CLASS OF ’78
YOUR SENIOR CLASS
PROJECT
AN INLAID MOSAIC TILE OF
THE TEXAS A&M SEAL —
WILL BE DEDICATED OCTOBER 29.
ATTEND THE DEDICATION
CEREMONY:
Saturday, October 29, 1977
10:00 A.M.
ACADEMIC BUILDING, 1st FLOOR
“FOR THE BEST YEAR EVER!”
SOUTHERN COMFORT CORPORATION, 100 PROOF LIQUEUR, ST. LOUIS. MO. 63132
rhis weekend, 05...
uncle
sunn's
...cordially invites you to
join us in celebrating the
return of FOOTBALL
HOUSTON
2719 SOUTH RICHEY 2775 F0NDREN
FREE ADMISSION WITH THIS INVITATION
Those tli
■cc pluee 1
pball wol
er the p;
e weakiT
jsy at pi e
IWlien T<
ked a 6:
jil the N (■
tli. trio s' *
Turk would
f JTjxleben
M) is ah
Hjth the kg
ar and a
Franklin:
[iml for 3(
looking
Steve Lit
Get ready-set
The MSC Lounge was the scene of intense
feelings and well-planned moves as students
— Concentrate!
competed in the Backgammon tournament
this past week. Battalion photo by Dickr
Phony identification papery
behind large credit losses
United Press International
NEW YORK — If you’ve won
dered why so many stores are reluc
tant to accept any identification ex
cept a driver’s license to cash a
check, the answer lies in the $1 bill
ion a year or more in losses Ameri
can banks and stores suffer through
forged ID papers.
The driver’s license isn’t 100 per
cent reliable, especially in the states
that don’t require the motorist’s
photograph on it, but it’s better than
other ID cards.
That’s mainly because the states
'Social register’
lists the nation’s
700 finest trees
United Press International
SACRAMENTO — California
boasts more than 40 national cham
pions of the tree world.
They are among about 700 tower
ing arbors which have made the
“Social Register of Trees, compiled
by the American Forestry Associa
tion to honor the biggest and pre
sumably the best of the nation’s
trees.
Heading the list of California
trees in the elite group is Sequoia
National Park’s lofty, 3,500-year-old
General Sherman.
There also are some lesser-known
greats, such as the Sequoia ever
greens on Redwood Creek in Hum
boldt County. Measuring in at 367.8
feet, it’s the tallest tree in the world.
California does not have the most
champion trees among the states.
Hawaii has 200 of them, selected by
height and girth. Florida, Michigan
and Texas also have more giants
than California.
But the biggest Jeffrey, lodgepole
and sugar pines in the country grow
in Stanislaus National Forest. The
champion golden chinkapin is
rooted in Sonoma County, while the
biggest Modoc cypress grows in
Plumas National Forest. The state
also is home to six varieties of the
tallest oaks.
do exchange information about lost,
stolen and known forged drivers’
licenses in a fairly rapid way through
computer networks.
Nevertheless, according to the
trade magazine, Bank Systems &
Equipment, losses of banks and
other credit grantors stemming from
forged ID papers still are mounting
because of carlessness on the part of
hank officials and mercantile credit
managers.
Author James Natal says losses on
check passing are small compared to
those on loans, credit cards and de
mand deposit accounts resulting
from use of phony ID papers.
Natal said far too many bank offi
cials just write the losses off and re
fuse to prosecute because they don’t
want to admit how naive they have
been or they think it takes too much
time and money to push the ease.
Obtaining fraudulent loans and
bank deposits in the name of people
who are long dead or never existed
has become an extremely lucrative
racket that owes its mushrooming
growth to the fact the computer
can’t have sudden flashes of intui
tive suspicion as a human clerk can.
As a result, banks, finance com
panies and merchants are hit for
millions of dollars of losses on loans
and credit card charges and big
overdrafts on deposits by characters
whose identification apparently
checks out until they suddenly van
ish into thin air.
Banking Systems & Equipitfl
The Texa
gan wor
|77-78 set
They
it'd, coa
Is team ;
|ce, “so w
Metcalf
said there are a number ofm|! m P . '
panics around the country ll
boldly advertise in vario |
magazines that they will supplf
ractici
They h
I'm (offon
complete set of phony identificaii| rns * in
sometimes includinil''^ 1
Jot
papers,
driver’s license, for as little as$7i|
Some of the people who used
phony ID’s are amateurs, but the
tide said most are profession
working through organized rit
operated by criminals who, forali L
will give backup verification«
vices on the phony ID papers. |lvJ
A girl sits in a room with aid I
phone connected to an answer; Up]\\ y
service for a long list of numbe L|, K j ve t|
When she gets a call from a bad L en awav
store about Paul X, she check | Q n j ue
cardfile and answers unblushing jj oner re t u
“Yes, Mr. X is employed here,
he has been with us a yean:
makes $18,000 a year,” reading
the card information which * e t s ] la( j
sophistical
cities in
The Ri
knows is false.
In an even more
operation, the rings, operali lonorthe
under various fictitious busim ontract,
names, succeed in feeding falseci
the Hoi
aid th
econd-roi
tewing t
dit information directly into tl Meeting hi
ith officii
Both te.
ith the r
computers of legitimate creditj ^
porting agencies about various
titious individuals.
The criminals rush out to
banks and stores and make a kil ues t
taking out loans and running up: )ar(
bills for valuable merchandise t» j mn | p jt
can be fenced. Then they vanish
Campus activities
Thursday
Colllege of Engineering Seminars,
Elmer Lignoul on Mechanical Engineer
ing in Construction”, 10a.m., 203 Zachry
Engineering Center
Town Hall, University Symphonic
Band. 12:30 p.m., University Center Mall
Dance Arts Society, modern dance and
jazz, 7:30 p.m., 260 G. Rollie White
Cepheid Variable, The Blob”, 8 & 10
p.m.. Rudder Theater
Texarkana Area Hometown Club, 8
p.m., 501 Rudder
342 Zachry En-
Friday
College of Engineering Seminars, Dr.
Charles Dalton on “Water Waves and
Wave Forces”, 2:30 p.m.
gineering Center
College of Engineering Seminars, Dr
J. H. Morehouse on “Solar-Assisted Df 1
ssicant Cooling”, 4 p.m., 12 Zachry Engi
neering Center
Aggie Cinema, Swashbuckler , 8 p in -
Rudder Theater
Saturday
Aggie Cinema, Swashbuckler , 8 p i"
Rudder Theater
Sunday ,
Management Seminar, sponsored !
the Executive Development Programs
fice of the College of Business Administri'
tion, Oct. 23-28, Texas A&M University
imple aii(
play ha:
ireventec
wo weeh
ihat the
eave can
eceiyed 1
The twi
ransactio
tun tradec
Boston I
choices ir
The di
early this
ceived tin
nounced
Now Better Than Ever. You Will Be Pleased With
These Carefully Prepared and Taste Tempting Foods
Each Daily Special Only $1.59 Plus Tax.
“Open Daily”
Dining: 11 A.M. to 1:30 P.M. — 4:00 P.M. to 7:00 P.M
MONDAY EVENING
SPECIAL
Salisbury Steak
with
Mushroom Gravy
Whipped Potatoes
Your Choice of
One Vegetable
Roll or Corn Bread and Butter
Coffee or Tea
TUESDAY EVENING
SPECIAL
Mexican Fiesta
Dinner
Two Cheese and
Onion Enchiladas
w/chili
Mexican Rice
Patio Style Pinto Beans
Tostadas
Coffee or Tea
One Corn Bread and Butter
WEDNESDAY
EVENING SPECIAL
Chicken Fried Beet
Steak w/cream
Gravy
Whipped Potatoes and
Choice of one other
Vegetable
Roll or Corn Bread and Buna
Coffee or Tea
THURSDAY EVENING SPECIAL
QPDv/cn^Lpoll^ Li9ht Spaghetti Dinner
SFFIVED WITH SPICED MEAT BALLS AND SAUCE
Par mesan Cheese - Tossed Green Salad
Choice of Salad Dressing - Hot Garlic Bread
Tea or Coffee
FRIDAY EVENING
SPECIAL
BREADED FISH
FILET w/TARTAR
SAUCE
Cole Slaw
Hush Puppies
Choice of one
vegetable
Roll or Corn Bread & Butter
Tea or Coffee
SATURDAY
NOON and EVENING
SPECIAL
Yankee Pot Roast
Texas Style”
Tossed Salad
Choice of one
vegetable
Roll or Corn Bread & Butter
Tea or Coffee
“QuaNty R^rsL’ ,
SUNDAY SPECIAL
NOON and EVENING
ROAST TURKEY DINNER
Served with
Cranberry Sauce
Cornbread Dressing
Roll or Corn Bread - Butter
Coffee or Tea
Giblet Gravy
And your choice of a n V
One vegetable
The
ades