The Battalion. (College Station, Tex.) 1893-current, May 03, 1979, Image 3

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    ws
l&M gets Gift of Music’
THE BATTALION Page 3
THURSDAY, MAY 3. 1979
163
damages
-barrel
Bv J. TRIGG CRAWFORD
If Battalion Reporter
yho says you can t get something
Hthing? tI
'or the past nine years the Hous-
Si mphony has sponsored a pro-
,- rlcalled “Gift of Music’ that
m-barrel high school and college stu-
wmdow ' t he opportunity to attend con-
,ry mthe[ sfre e, and Texas A&M Univer-
damagej, is 0 ne of the colleges to receive
rhuretor £ets for next season.
Practices ;jn re the program’s beginning,
But tie # dreds of students have bene-
r mental a and this year the symphony
de Prac ' ns to sponsor at least 500 stu-
I- . , .
Ke money for this program comes
■ corporation and private con-
DUtions. The money buys 10 eon-
Thickets for a $10 donation. The
tickets are then given out to schools
that either requested the tickets or
ones the contributor has specified.
Mrs. Thomas A. Reiter, Gift of
Music chairman for the Houston
Symphony League, said the program
provides students with individual or
season tickets to all Sunday after
noon concerts.
She said some of the major con
tributors are alumni from the spon
sor schools. She said there are almost
250 contributors who give at least
$10, but individual contributors give
as much as $250.
I he program for free concerts has
become popular, and the demand for
tickets now exceeds the supply.
This year schools are soliciting
donors to contribute Gifts of Music
for their own students, but Houston
Symphony sales director Davis Allen
said that normally students can’t get
the Gift of Music tickets unless the
contributor specifies tbeir school.
Specific allotments of tickets have
not teen set because all money
needed has not been received.
Students wanting more informa
tion about free concert tickets should
check with the MSC Box Office dur
ing the fall semester.
Rice University, University of
Houston, Texas Southern Univer
sity, Sam Houston State University
and Prairie View University are
among the 23 other colleges and uni
versities receiving the Gift of Music
Tickets.
WANTED
Horses looking for lush pasture or
comfortable stalls. Also horse
owners needing round pen, walker,
wash rack, arena. « ^
For Information Contact:
Boonville Horse Center
"the Stable place to Stall around”
Off East By-Pass on Boonville Road
779-8772
Onttraka
HgP
^BROOKS
&U4t€M.
Qcorverse
QC^.
Men’s & women’s tennis apparel
T-Shirts & custom-design transfers
Complete selection of athletic clothing
OPEN 9:30-6:00
-Jh.
Lorkrr Koom
“SPORTSHOES UNLIMITED'’
3ae VILLA MARIA RD ACROSS FROM MANOR EAST MALL 779 9484
THE BATT DOES IT DAILY
Monday through Friday
al data on phone tapes
Texans may get free help
lcin g riot L
n shortly 6
s the first
it Moody
on May
he never
/XtlBv REGINA MOEHLMAN
/ * K Battalion Staff
rf , anc (Vjth the approval of its board of
U' ln? l» rs ’ *he State Bar of Texas may
rep0r *Bnake instant, free legal advice
■ble to anyone in Texas with a
Hr
■ board is considering approval
of the Tel-Law program. With the
service, consumers can call a local
number in their community and lis
ten to tapes with legal advice on di
vorce, wills, real estate, taxes and
other subjects.
“We emphasize that these are not
intended to solve all legal problems.
Jenate law committee
)ill defines death
lies
he New
hain of
rd, vice
letter of
ca Inc.,
ly news- K United Press International
negotia- ■VUSTIN — A bill that would set legal standards for determining
>f New wnen death occurs passed the Senate Jurisprudence Committee Tues-
nt plans
■The bill provides a person would be pronounced dead when there is
■ spontaneous breathing and heartbeat and the condition is deter-
m ned to be irreversible. If artificial life support systems are used that
prevent determining if a person is breathing and has a heartbeat on his
■n, the person would be considered dead if he suffered an irreversi
ble cessation of brain function.
■The bill, sponsored by Sen. Ray Farabee, D-Wichita Falls, also
provides that the person must be pronounced dead before artificial
means of supporting heartbeat and respiration are stopped.
■Protections for physicians and others are provided in the bill by
at 26.9 prohibiting a physician from being held liable if he determines death
lieven under the bill’s standards. Similar protections apply to those who act
in Los on a physician’s determination of death.
e down ||The bill, which was sponsored by Rep. Henry Alice, has already
station Iftsscd the House and now goes before the full Senate,
up the pThe committee also passed a bill by Sen. Oscar Mauzy, D-Dallas,
it 3,339 which would allow parents to collect benefits, including compensation
vent for for mental anguish and suffering, arising from lawsuits over the wrong
ful death of their children.
■ Sen. Bill Meier, D-Euless, attempted to put a $50,000 cap on the
amount parents or other beneficiaries could recover under the bill but
failed before the bill passed to the full Senate.
>.9
ima
ic mailj
i., City ;
others,
killed, ‘
y to the
e office I
jurb of
:e over
leither
i‘d any!
n
BUY
ALL
BOOKS
8-5:30
’Shop Us First”
rs
HAS
X/MVAA7V
“FREE-STYLE” LEOTARD
Knit of Millskin Nylon and Spandex
but at least help by answering some
questions,” said Larry Fitzgerald,
director of communications for the
State Bar.
At the end of each tape, the lis
tener is urged to contact a lawyer if
further help is needed.
If the program is approved at this
month’s board meeting, it will take
about three months to set up.
Fitzgerald hopes to have about 80
tapes, each lasting five minutes.
Local bar chapters must pay for
the tapes and are also responsible for
setting up a phone center in their
area when they join the program.
The directors of the State Bar, the
Texas Young Lawyers Association
and the Lawyer Referral Service are
considering underwriting part of the
cost also.
Tel-Law began in California and is
now operating successfully in Wash
ington, New York and Oregan,
Fitzgerald said.
Fitzgerald said Tel-Law is in
tended to help Texans who, “don’t
know how to go about contacting an
attorney. Many people just don’t
know what to do.”
Vi*
v *
SNOOK
OPEN
RODEO
8:00 p.m., May 5th
I Saturday Only
Admission $2.50
2Vi miles west of Snook on FM 60.
(Intersection FM 60 and FM 3058)
The Corps of Cadets gets Its news from
the Batt.
STARLIGHT BALLROOM
“Featuring this week.. ”
Western Electrical
Admission $3.00 ^
iM
T>J
BALLROOM
KENWOOD
KR-3090 AM/FM-Stereo Receiver
26 Watts per Channel, Min. RMS at 8 ohms.
SUPER TAPE
SPECIAL
FUJI
CASSETTE
$2 59
90 minute
60 minute $ “1 95
(limit 5 per customer)
CLEARANCE SPECIALS
DEMO MODELS — LEFTOVER MODELS — TRADE-INS
► ^ STUDIO MODEL V LOUDSPEAKER
(12-inch, 3-way, air suspension) $49 EACH
JVC QUAD RECEIVER
CO^ CD-4 plus remote joy stick control, (trade-in, $1 1 Q
cost $300 new) II?#
SANSUI 6060 STEREO RECEIVER
V otk 40 watts/channel — full warranty (1 Demo) ^239 95
SHARP STEREO MUSIC CENTER
^ AM/FM cassette recorder with APSS and 95
automatic change (1 Demo — full warranty)
v0 *v JVC 5436 RECEIVER
50 watts/channel in stereo plus 5-Band equal- $OQQ95
izer (1 Demo)
TECHNICS BEST TUNER
$1QQ
^ ST-8600 Closeout — only 2 left. ■
SHARP SP4000 SPEAKERS
EACH
& Bass reflex 3-speaker system (floor models)
SHARP 1165 CASSETTE DECK
Exclusive APSS. Demo with full warranty. 69
MANY MORE CLEARANCE SPECIALS ON
TOP-QUALITY STEREO COMPONENTS
THESE ARE BUT A FEW OF THE FANTASTIC BARGAINS ON
TOP STEREO COMPONENTS NOW AT THE CENTER — WE
ARE COMMITTED TO FIGHTING INFLATION BY KEEPING OUR
PRICES LOW AND STILL DELIVERING QUALITY MERCHAN
DISE & PROFESSIONAL SERVICE.
BANKAMERICARD, VISA, MASTER CHARGE,
CHECK OR CASH ACCEPTED
3820 TEXAS AVE.
846-1735
(Next to Randy Sims BarBQue)