The Battalion. (College Station, Tex.) 1893-current, May 05, 1981, Image 8

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    Page 8
THE BATTALION
TUESDAY, MAY 5, 1981
SPECIAL NOTICE
Optional Board Plan
Summer Students may dine on the board plan during the First session
of summer school at Texas A&M University. Each board student may
dine three meals each day except Sunday evening if the seven day
plan is selected, and three meals each day, Monday through Friday, if
the five day plan is preferred. Each meal is served in the Commons.
Fees for each session are payable to the Controller of Accounts, Fiscal
Office, Coke building.
Board fees for each plan are as follows:
Plans First Session
Seven Day - $171.43 Jun 2 through Jul 2
Five Day - $154.29 and
Plus Tax Jul 6 throu 9*t Jul 8
Day students, including graduate students may purchase either of the
board plans.
National
Police theorize children trusted killer
United Press International
ATLANTA — Police say the kil
ler or killers of 26 young blacks
may have made contact with the
victims prior to their slayings be
cause most of the bodies show no
signs of struggle.
“The victim trusts him, feels
comfortable with him. There’s no
reason to suspect him or fear
him,” one investigator close to the
case said Sunday.
The killer probably is not a per
son close to the young blacks but
could be making casual contact
and arranging to meet at a later
time, possibly offering money for a
job to be performed in the future,
or be making a sex-for-hire prop
osition, authorities said Sunday.
“That’s a possibility I don’t
think we can rule out, ” the investi-
\gator said.
In a series of 10 slayings since
the first of the year, only one of the
victims — Terry Lorenzo Pue, 15
— showed signs of struggling with
his killer. Abrasions were found
on Pue’s elbows and minor bruises
on his head.
A source close to the investiga
tion said it was “pure speculation”
that the killer or killers were ac
quainted with the victims, “but
you've got to consider the fact that
none of the (youths) put up a
struggle.
“It depends on the child, and
many of them have been called
‘street-smart’ and looked for ways
to make money,” the source
added. “It’s very possible they
could have been attracted by the
murderer.
“You can’t overlook it,” he said.
“We’ve thought of that before-
that it’s someone who’s close (to
the victim). And then again, we
have no witnesses seeing them,
We don’t know if they ’re in avelii-
cle or being picked up on foot. I
see this all the time where you’ve
got men and women walking toa
car with a child and you assume its
family.”
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Spearman, Sears and Murphy, Inc.
1701 Southwest Parkway, Suite 100
696-8853
Dems helping, leader says
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Open ’til 8 p.m. through Finals
United Press International
WASHINGTON — House
Democratic leader Jim Wright
said Monday the American people
want Congress to cooperate with
President Reagan, but not “take
orders from him” in drafting a fed
eral budget.
Wright, speaking to the Na
tional Press Club, said a Democra
tic alternative budget is “an hon
est effort to embrace the best parts
of the president’s recommenda
tions and to improve upon the
other parts.”
He said Democratic leaders of
the House have tried to be cooper
ative and have not been obstruc
tionists in the struggle to develop
a federal budget.
“The American people expect
their Congress to be cooperative,
conciliatory and helpful. They
want us to work with the presi
dent, and that is our duty,”
Wright said.
“They do not expect us to take
orders from him, however popular
and charismatic a figure he may
be. For that would be dictator
ship,” he said.
Wright acknowledged that last
November’s election was a man
date for “constructive change” and
to improve the nation’s productiv
ity, but argued it was not a man
date for specific actions.
“The public wants the govern
ment to stop abuses in the welfare
program, in the food stamp prog
ram, in the student loan prog
ram,” he said. “The public did not
say it wanted us to stop the prog
rams entirely.”
The House is presently consid
ering two budget proposals: the
Reagan measure modified with
additional spending cuts and a
Democratic plan that restores
some funds to social programs.
The Reagan proposal would
end several federal programs that
the Democratic plan would pare
down but keep alive.
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A hearty bowl of soup and chunk of hot
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:* LIVE ENTERTAINMENT
Thur.
Fri.
Sat.
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Lunch 11-2:30 Mon.-Fri.
Evenings 5-12 Mon.-Fri.
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Happy Hour 5-7 Mon.-Sat.
350 Draft Beer 750 Bar Drinks
V2 Price Call Drinks
^ Now Open 4-9 Sunday
Serving Dinner 5-10:30
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Congratulations,
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Happy Hour Monday-Wednesday
5-8 p.m. This Week!
Don’t forget YOUR
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Available Monday through Friday, 8 a.m. to
5 p.m.
Room 216, Reed McDonald Building
Bring your ID card
Eddie Chiles gets
another ‘mad’ ad
United Press International
FORT WORTH — Oilman
Eddie Chiles is mad again.
Chiles, who also owns the
Texas Rangers, had paid for
broadcast advertisements criti
cizing governmental bureaucra
cy during the Carter adminis
tration and distributed red
bumper stickers proclaiming
“I’m mad, too, Eddie” to sup
porters.
He stopped his campaign
when Ronald Reagan was
elected.
But now the owner of the
Western Co. of North America
is angry at House Majority
Leader Jim Wright — who he
thinks is sabotaging President
Reagan s efforts to turn the eco
nomy around.
In a full-page advertisement
in Sunday’s Fort Worth Star-
Telegram, Chiles lashed out at
Wright for leading a Democra
tic group with an alternative
budget plan.
He said Wright was being
about as effective for the people
of the 12th Congressional Dis
trict as “a screen door on a sub-
“They (12th District voters)
elected President Reagan to get
a certain job done and because
they liked his program,” Chiles
said. “Now Congressman
Wright is working against that
progam.’’
Chiles said he will have bum
per stickers made that say “I’m
mad at you, too, Jim” as part of
his latest campaign against
Wright.
In 1979, Chiles attacked
Wright for his stands on energy
and at that time, Wright said
Chiles was on an “ego trip” and
felt the 12th District congress
men should be owned by
Chiles’ company.
Meanwhile, the Rev. JohnL
Thompson, the Atlanta Police
Bureau chaplain, said police offic
ers and their families also are suf
fering because of the slayings of26
young blacks and the disappear
ance of another — Darron Glass,
10 — in the past 21 months.
“They (police officers) have
taken it so personally,” he
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Fighting
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MSC AGGIE CINEMA
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presents
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7:30 & 9:30
PIRANHACON II
featuring
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"ROLLER BOOGIE"
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"ATTACK OF THE
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Boston for
after four g
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beaten the C
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Campus Theatre
Now Showing
7:40-9:45
ALTERED STATES
Starts Friday
Double Feature
Goldie Hawn In
PRIVATE
BENJAMIN
ALSO
Robert Duvall In
YOU'LL WISH YOU COULD
STOP THE FILM!
DON'T MISS A SINGLE ONE
OF THESE CINEMA CLASSICS
COMING MAY 8
The MS
Student
entry f c