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THE BATTALION
FRIDAY. APRIL 27. 1979
ME YOU ONE OF THE THOUSANDS
OF UNOERGRADS NATIONWIDE WHO
WILL LEAVE COLLEGE THIS YEAR?
Today’s Army may be able to help.
Everyday, men and women are earning
college credits part-time while being
soldiers full-time. And the Army is
paying up to 75% of their tuition for ap
proved courses.
Also, many are contributing to a sav
ings plan that will provide financial
assistance for college following their
first enlistment. Sound like the answer
to your problems?
Call Army Opportunities at
SSG JAMES DODSON
120 Washington Ave
Bryan 822-5713 or 822-1569
Join the people who’ve joined the Army.
An Equal Opportunity Employer
Attorney for Hess
plans to sue Carter
United Press International
AUSTIN — Nazi Germany dep
uty fuehrer Rudolf Hess celebrated
his 85th birthday Thursday alone in
side Spandau prison in Berlin while
his attorney in Texas said he plans to
sue President Carter if no action is
taken to free the ailing war criminal.
Merrell Frazer Jr. of Austin has
worked at Hess’ family request for
four years to free the last prisoner of
World War II. Frazer said he has
sent a letter to Carter urging him to
assert America’s influence to obtain
Hess’ release and threatening to file
a writ of mandamus against Carter if
FOR A SUGAR
FREE LUNCH
Come to the most
complete salad bar
in Texas in the
Sbisa Dining Cen
ter Basement.
Open 10:30 a.m.-1:30 p.m.
Monday thru Friday
he does not.
“The time has come, Mr. Presi
dent, to release this man on our own
volition and to regain our sovereign
rights in Berlin which so recklessly
have been eroded away by inaction,
indecision and ineptitude,” Frazer
said in the letter.
Frazer said that against Nurem
berg regulations and Berlin pro
tocol, Hess is being held in solitary
confinement — only being allowed
to see one visitor for 30 minutes
each month. '
The attorney added that Hess is
allowed to watch any communist
televison news programs he wishes
to see, but all three major Western
television news programs. Western
newspapers and mail are censored.
Frazer said the United States,
France and Great Britain have*pub
licly declared that they are willing to
release Hess for humanitarian rea
sons — besides his age, Frazer said
Hess suffers from cancer, mental
illness and has tried to commit
suicide three times.
The Soviet Union has vetoed
Hess’ release, claiming he repre
sents the last vestiges of facism.
Other Nazi war criminals sentenced
to life imprisonment, including Hi
tler’s architect, Albert Speer and
Hitler’s successor. Grand Admiral
Carl Doenitz, have been released.
Frazer charged that the Soviet
Union refuses to release Hess be
cause he knows too much about the
secret annex to the Soviet-German
non-aggression pact.
“Did you know that Nazi Ger
many and Soviet Russia were allies
during the first 22 months of World
War II?,” Frazer asked.
“Also, Russia doesn’t want the
WQrld to remember their infamous
Katyn Forest massacre when they
systematically murdered 11,000
Polish Army officers,” he added.
Frazer admitted that the release
of Hess would not be a politically
popular move with some Jewish
people in the country or from com
munist countries around the world,
but he said many of his Jewish
friends have also called for Hess’ re
lease.
He said the International Military
Tribunal, which sentenced Hess to
life imprisonment for crimes against
peace, disbanded years ago and
there is no other court of interna
tional law to which the Hess case
could be appealed.
Century cyclen
to ride Saturday
By ROBIN THOMPSON
Battalion Reporter
One way to spend the last weekend before dead weekandfii^
to take a 100-mile tour of the Brazos Valley area —on a bicycle
the Aggie Wheelmen sponsor the Headwind Century RideSatiirjj
The ride will start at 7:30 a.m. at Rudder fountain. The rife
head south to Independence, west to Burton and back toward^
lege Station along the south side of Lake Somerville.
“We call it the headwind because it seems like we are always
against the wind,” said Brent Johnson, Wheelmen president.
The riders will be followed by a “sag wagon which will havil
and water for sagging riders and some tools and spare parts foil*
cles.
Johnson said that riders should bring their own food i
wear bright clothing and be in good condition.
He said he expected between 20 and 30 participants in
ride.
Johnson said a “century ride” means 100 miles to be complete
10 hours or less. He said this particular trip has been completeâ„¢
few as six hours. i
It costs 50 cents for members of the Aggie Wheelmen to enten
$1 for non-members.
No awards will be presented but those who want to provet
entered can buy a patch that says “Headwind Hundred.
Cattlemen predict price
due to grazing land cutis
United Press International
DENVER — Under the Bureau
of Land Management’s recently re
vised grazing program, public land
in some areas will be cut back by a
T 111TTTT TT T T T I I I I IT 11 in
PLITT Southern
i
CINEMA I
Tickets for this exclusive and special engagement
are $2. Regular rates will resume with our next
midnight feature.
UNIVERSITY SQUARE SHOPPING CENTER 846-6714 & 846-1151
CORNER OF UNIVERSITY & COLLEGE - COLLEGE STATION
It’s still the same
old story, a fight
for love and
third, forcing cattlemen to
size, Lauren Carlson, pres
the National Cattleman’s.ti
tion said Wednesday.
We feel that mostoftlei |
tions that have beenorderdi
necessary in order to i|
rangeland,” he said.
To prove that point, Caih
the BLM exceeded a courtmi B
improving the quality i)[|| H
lands by reducing the a«i B
grazing land available altln Tin
order only requirdoun
environmental impact stattma n®
He said this created ap iual
burden for western cattltgaar,
cause they are more depeaii ani,
federal land and the shifted Go
the scales for smaller openi teA
glory.
99
*
ending their economic'
ro
Pisn
«£D
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AL
GOlOSU'*
MAG
tHbrlc’JU
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â– 
touch
Down
OF A
FLICK'
Cn‘ GH
S0CIE
A SYMPHONY
OF SALADS f$j;
SBISA DINING
CENTER
BASEMENT
10:30 a.m.*
1:30 p.m.
Monday
thru
Friday
Quality First
lie I
a
f nm
Eddie Domingueijl
Joe Arciniega'
TV
njrf ^
thc film mars as new \
AS TODAY 'S HCADI INFS!
m
IPL AT IT AGAIN. SAM"’ :
$1.25
FRIDAY AND SATURDAY MIDNIGHTS
Tickets go on sale at 6:30
iiiiiiiiiiiiinrirriTiiriiTiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiUTTTmfl
If you want the real
thing, not frozen or
canned ... We call It
"Mexican Food
Supreme."
Dallas location:
3071 Northwest Hwy
352-8570
MSC AGGIE CINEMA
Admission:
$ 1.00 with
TAMU ID
Advance Tl
On Sal J
AtM$<v
Box Offk
ill
â–  m
â– 
“ It’s my own fault.
I didn’t take the pill.”
[>**•
1978 Paiamount Pictures Corporation All Rights Reserved
A Carl Reiner Film
HENRY WINKLER
TIMOTHY BOTTOMS • LINDSAY WAGNER • JOHN HOUSEMAN m’THE PAPER CHASE"
r BEST PICTURE ^ ^ ROBERT C. THOMPSON or* ROOR1CK PAUL by JAMES BRIDGES
•oybJAMES BRIDGES JOHN JAY OSBORN. JR. by JOHN WILLIAMS
7— 1 ccx.cn or c
WANT TO SPKNO tb
n DAVIDSON on 80th Century Reconi. |
THE MARX
BROTHER
Paramount Pictures Presents A First Artists Production
rated PG
rated PG
rated PG
DUCK SOUP
ANIMAL CRACKer
Friday
8 P.M.
April 27 I Friday
Rudder Auditorium I Midnight
April 27 I Sunday
Rudder Theater I 8 P.M.
April 29
Rudder Theater
Wednesday
8 P.M.
Rudder Theater
Mays
9:30 P M.