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About The Battalion. (College Station, Tex.) 1893-current | View Entire Issue (Feb. 14, 1980)
Page 10 IHh BATTALION THURSDAY, FEBRUARY 14, 1980 TH MONO 333 U kiatioi Clu Culpepper Plaza 693-3577 a 7'\ United Pr TRINIDAE and a wallet clues investig an apparent than 30 years Lou Girodt for the state’s trict based ir murder occui Kiuer or Kinei If not deac or persons < old, Girodo : c The inves only physical ton with seve TC sing, a bulle and shoes — II be Rudolph of Pueblo. I 1 Officials sa amateur box< ■ \ 6:C ' ^ 8:i 1 10 12 1-< c£j STE 4 Braided straps on a stacked leather cowboy heel. Tan. 23.99. 10-8 Mon.-Fri. and 10-6 Fri.-Sat. 1 quint breathes OK, others are struggling nation camp United Press International CHICAGO — The first and largest of the Moeller quintuplets born at Northwestern Memorial Let us inform & entertain you for /nv/te the bunch... mix a great big bucket full of Open House Punch jO Serves 32... tastes like a super cocktail! Smoothest, most delicious drink for any crowd! Mix in advance, add 7UP and ice at party time — and serve from the bucket. Looks and tastes great. j&L Recipe: One fifth Southern Comfort 3 quarts 7UP 6 oz. fresh lemon juice One 6-oz. can frozen orange juice One 6-oz. can frozen lemonade Chill ingredients. Mix in bucket, adding 7UP last. Add drops of red food coloring (optional); stir. Add ice. orange and lemon slices. Puts punch in any party! Southern Comfort Nothing's so delicious as Comfort® on-the-rocks! SOUTHERN COMFORT CORPORATION. 80 100 PROOF LIQUEUR. ST LOUIS. MO 63132 1/2 price Receive the new morning Chronicle for half-price for daily and Sunday delivery all semester and get thorough, news coverage. Coverage which offers more significant and timely information than any textbook. Information which will help you excel in classes. But we give you more than news. We offer the latest sports coverage, fashion, money-saving and time-saving recipes and entertainment. Sunday's Zest magazine previews and reviews plays, movies, books, and music. To start your subscription today, call 693-2323 or 846-0763. January 14 to May 9 for 89.35. Houston Chronicle Hospital was breathing Wednesday without the help of respiratory sup port, but his siblings still needed the help of breathing aids. The quints, four boys and a girl, were born nine weeks prematurely Saturday to Patricia and Allen Moel ler. The mother, 27, became pre gnant after taking the fertility drug, Colmed. Allen Jake Jr., who weighed 3 pounds, 2 ounces at birth, was taken off a respirator Tuesday and put in an incubator, hospital officials said. “He is breathing without the aid of any respiratory support. His condi tion has improved somewhat,” the spokesman said. The four smallest infants were given additional respiratory help Monday because their condition had worsened slightly. They remained in fair condition in the intensive care THE EPISCOPAL CHURCH INVITES ALL INTERESTED TO CHURCH SERVICES 8:00,9:15,11:00 A.M. SUNDAYS and ASH WEDNESDAY, FEBRUARY 20 6:30 P.M., 12:10 Noon, 5:30 P.M. and INOUIRERS CLASSES beginning SUNDAY, FEBRUARY 24, 1980 7:30 P.M. in The Church ST. THOMAS EPISCOPAL CHURCH 906 Jersey Street South side of A&M Campus 696-1726 i MSC Town Hall Thursday Feb. 21 8:00pm G. Rollie White Coliseum Tickets: $5.25,6.50,7.00 MSC Box Office 845-2916 illiJAiJit III? wl" tec ex yc gi FI CUSTOMIZE YOURTEAM! with custom T-shirts from Loupot's Wholesale Retail ^LOUPOT'S tP We have custom T-shirts and caps to fit any team or any group. INorthgate-At the corner across from the Post Office. New England gets Bush first black mayor nursery. The other boys are Mark Patrick, 2 pounds, 7 ounces; David Thomas, 2 pounds, 15 ounces; and Nicholas John, 2 pounds, MVz ounces. The girl, Elizabeth Rose, weighed 2 pounds, 3V2 ounces. Mrs. Moeller was expected to re main in the hospital at least through the weekend. The quintuplets were born by Caesarean section. United Press International NEW LONDON, Conn. — It could be expected that the son of a man with the grand old American name of Andrew Jackson might one day seek elective office. He did, and now he is New England’s first black mayor. Leo E. Jackson’s $l,000-a-year job is largely ceremonial, but he likes what it tells young people. “It shows that someone who doesn’t have a half-dozen different degrees or doesn’t come from an affluent family can succeed through hard work and a lot of help from other people,” said Jackson, whose late father was a namesake of the seventh president of the United States, was a Springfield, Mass., real estate man. New London, a city of 30,600, is an old whaling port with a rich past and a new downtown. Nathan Hale taught school across the street from City Hall. And, Eugene O’Neill leaned on the city in some of his famous plays. Jackson, 54, a Democrat, was elected one of seven council mem bers in citywide voting in 1979, re bounding from a 38-vote defeat two years before. The council, compris ed now of five Democrats and two Republicans, elects one of thir num ber mayor. Jackson was sworn in Dec. 3. He started as a public service volunteer for the Easter Seal Rehabi litation Center and later was named a redevelopment agency commission er. Four years ago, he won a seat on the board of education, the first black to do so in the city’s 333-year history. The mayor, a trim 6-footer, wears a white button in his lapel, symboliz ing support for President Carter’s handling of the Iranian hostage crisis. His first proclamation endorsed Carter’s hostage posture and city police cars have white streamers flut- ? tering from their aerials. Jackson has endorsed Cartenu election hid because the presR- implemented equal rightslegisb; that Jackson says up until then*?; Hampshire three “just pieces of paper.’ HesaiJi 1 : L e b- 26 primary, president “has been a great fc: Bush had agreet United Press Both Ronald Re Bush have agreed ■ ‘front-runner” help changing the total welfares; tern, helping those who can’tli; themselves.” “A lot of people are criticiair. president, saying he couldhaveis better, but 1 think he has doofi! outstanding job, he saidathisltj in city council chambers. Helusj office and makes do in typical England fashion. Jackson is an instructorinmaiK- ment-by-objectives and weldinu the submarine yards of the Eleft’ Boat Division of the General lb mics Corp., a job that allows e time for some of his mayoral cfe He is working toward a business administration. High cost, low supply U.S. energy news in United Press International WASHINGTON; Members of Congress Tuesday accused the Ener gy Department of indifference to soaring home fuel costs. A public in terest group said the agency has failed to punish refiners for multibil- lion-dollar overcharges. BATON ROUGE, La.: Represen tatives of Texaco Inc., one of the largest suppliers of natural gas in the state, said Tuesday shortages in sup plies may make it impossible for the company to meet the fuel demands of major state industries as soon as next year. LISBON, Portugal: Angola has raised the price of its crude oil by 6.3 percent from $31.79 to $33.80 per barrel, the official Angolan agency ANGOP reported Tuesday. RIYADH, Saudi Arabia: Vene zuela, South America’s chief oil pro ducer, began summit talks Tuesday with Saudi Arabia aimed at seeking a single-tier oil pricing system for the Organization of Petroleum Export ing Countries. NEW YORK: Standard OilCc; Indiana said Tuesday an initialteS; its well in the Overthrust Bell: southwestern Wyoming reveals "significant” natural gas flow ala rate of 8.5 million cubic feet ads go to participate i ill be sponsore ‘Telegraph. His ; chairman, former tsaid by telephon N.H., that “we’ ,we’ll be ready.” [ The joy was /however. 1. Former Gov. who is backing S Howard Baker, 1 but delighted wit plained it is too < Republican field Bush and Reag 0 take part in th< Voters’ presiden day in Manchest GOP candidates One of the five decided Tuesda the presidential his home state, filing deadline f I on the ballot, bu not withdrawing Dole, who wa: presidential run has fallen from a cent to around jp GOP president! I He said in a ! ! ate duties cont | priority. I am cc | pie of Kansas ar 2 starving sisters eat newspaper last suppei Ken host news { I Carter gives draft plan United Press International WASHINGTON — The first in ductee could report within 13 days after the president declares a nation al emergency and up to 100,000 men and women could be processed in less than a month under President Carter’s contingency plans for a draft. In telling Congress this Tuesday, Carter said he has no intention of moving to institute the draft “under present circumstances.” But in the event America returns to the draft, he said, the first chosen will be 20- year-olds picked by lottery. “If it ever becomes necessary to draft anyone. Selective Service will operate under the concept of random selection (lottery) based upon year and date of birth, ” Carter said in a report sent to Capitol Hill. “The first year-of-birth group from which inductees will be drawn is the one that contains those who reach 20 in a given calendar year,” he said. His contingency plan was in cluded in a 62-page report on Selec tive Service reform that Congress directed the president to prepare last year. It includes his proposal for immediate military registration of men and women born in 1960 and 1961. United Press International COLUMBUS, Ohio — The bodies of two elderly sisters were found in their 'hotne where they apparently starved to death, after first trying to survive by eating news paper. Police said Naomi Schreiner, 76, was found Monday in a bed. Her sister Ruth, 74, was found lying on the floor of an upstairs bedroom. They apparently had been dead for several days. An assistant coroner at the scs / attributed their deaths to starvati; aqd dehydration.” said Dete# Sgt. John Shawkey. Police found little rolls of » paper on plates as if the womenkf been eating them. “Itappearedfo, the way it (the paper rolls)wassifc around it appeared they wereeatc the pater,” said Shawkey. Neighbors described the Sell© er sisters as “eccentric" and ft l “proud girls, but odd." United Pr NASHUA, N Kennedy Wedn the U.S. hosta; released to a tl the proposed I the deposed sh Campaigninj 26 New Ham presidential pr reporters that 1 1 released to thi any commissio : tion. “I think the ‘ osal would be 1 ■ commission 1 uished men ai widely accept ‘Newscam’ finds 8 honest New Yorkers a// r» VUw 7'!\ United Press International NEW YORK — There are at least eight honest people in New York City, the New York Daily News re ported Wednesday in revealing the results of its “Newscam” probe — a tongue-in-cheek takeoff on the FBI’s “Abscam” investigation. A card inside identified the oe: of the wallet as Fergus McNultyoi gave a Brooklyn address and tflf phone number. A hidden camfit mau snapped each of 10 pedestrie who retreived the wallets. Monday morning, the newspaper said, an “undercover operative drop ped a black plastic wallet” in front of the U.S. District Courthouse in Brooklyn. By noon Tuesday, the pa; ported, there were eight calls toil phone number who said theyfon* the wallet, which contained $5. i P It was the first of 10 wallets planted near the building, “where coincidentally prosecutors were piecing together the Abscam case,” the account reported. The newspaper said “this is siderable higher incidence of inW ty thay reported by Abscam aRents who arc currently investigating( ( integrity of politicians and report out half of them have accept bribes. BUY, SELL, RENT, ANNOUNCE. Battalion Classified Pulls! 7 1