local/state Battalion/Page { February 19, The Best Pizza In Town! Honest WE DELIVER 846-3412 Gas leak causes Mr. Gatti's Pizzamat AFTER 5 P.M. — MIN. $5.00 ORDER University power loss Wednesday by Cyndy Davis THIS WEEKEND! Thursday is Aggie Nite 2 For 1 Bar, Drinks All Nite! Get In Free With Your A&M I.D. Before 9 p.m. PLUS TRICYCLE RACES! First Price $200! LIVE MUSIC! Thurs.-Fri. by ROY CARROLL! Sat. by SUZANNE CARLSON! LIVE ENTERTAINMENT TUESDAY-SATURDAY! “The Finest Night Club Within 100 Miles!’ Open Tues.-Sun. 6 p.m. “A Touch of Country Class!” 5 Miles South of College Station Hwy. 6 Across from Texas World Speedway Battalion Staff The Texas A&M Physical Plant cut electrical power to parts of the campus Wednesday because of a gas line break, Dire ctor Joe J. Estill said. Half the campus was without electricity from 2:11 p.m. to 3:45 p.m. Lone Star Gas Co. experi enced a gas leak in one of its main transmission lines at a con struction site near the east Bypass when a large earth- moving machine broke the line, decreasing pressure, a company representative said. The com pany had to further decrease power in the line to try to repair it. Lone Star provides gas for the generators that provide elec tricity to the campus. When the off, gas was turned off, the physical plant workers had to compen sate. “The gas pressure dropped drastically,” Estill said. “Our boilers and gas turbines require high pressure gas to operate, so we had to cut off some of the circuits so we wouldn’t lose all power. Power was shut off by the physical plant while they con verted their equipment from gas power to oil power. Affected areas included the Memorial Student Center, Rud der Tower, G. Rollie White Col iseum and East Kyle. Also affected were the Comrflons, the Corps dorms and a majority of the classroom buildings on the central campus. s ATTENTION ALL TAMU WOMEN: 11 Applications are now available for annual DELTA DELTA DELTA Scholarships j j Applications will be considered on basis of: — academic record — extra curricular activities — community service — promise of service to their chosen field — financial need FOR MORE INFORMATION CALL 260-0453 696-3331 Air Force experience can get your career off the ground. If you’re in the market for a challenge, consider becoming an Air Force pilot, navigator or engineer. Top performance is a way of life in the Air Force. As an officer, you’ll be a vital part of the important role that the Air Force plays in world affairs. Find out how Air Force pilots, navigators and engineers enjoy a GREAT WAY OF LIFE by contacting: and I bet you thought we only flew airplanes! Tsgt. Ron Hamilton 707 University Dr. College Station (713) 846-5521 846-6790 or check with The Placement Center for recruiting dates. | AWiR [0, A great way of life. Prison inmates testify that warden was violent! United Press International GALVESTON — Although the state’s top rison official denies Warden Wallace Pack ad a violent reputation, inmates testifying in the trial of a prisoner accused of killing Pack paint a much different picture. One former inmate testified Thursday that Pack ordered the death of an inmate, ordered inmates to be injected with Thorazine as a dis ciplinary measure and once attacked him with a pair of pliers. During the past week several other inmates called to testify in defense of inmate Eroy Brown, 31, of Waco also have portrayed Mack as a man violent to inmates. Defense attorneys are trying to prove Brown feared for his life and acted in self- defense April 4, when he killed the 54-year-old Texas Department of Corrections Ellis Unit warden and Ellis Unit farm manager Billy Max Moore, 49. No trial has been set in the death of Moore. Prosecutors contend the prison officials were killed in a rage over a denied furlough. TDC Prison Director WJ. Estelle testified Thursday he never received a complaint about Pack. “He was not absolutely a go-by-the-book- man,” Estelle said. “He had the reputation for being an enforcer of rules and regulations. He would fairly enforce the rules and was consis tent, but had no reputation for violence." Tommy Carlisle, 39, now a San Antonioni salesman, testified Thursday he knew] when the warden was a major at the Wj Unit in Huntsville. Carlisle said he servedtinl at the Wynne Unit between 1960 and 1974[[| burglary and murder. Carlisle said Pack threatened "to blo»ti brains out” if he told federal authoritiesPjd had ordered him and other inmate-guany kill inmate Melvin Austin. Carlisle said Aus died of a heart attack following a beatingbyili inmate-guards. Carlisle also said that when he wasap nurse Pack ordered him to inject Thora into inmates “as a form of punishment. Item make an inmate immobile for twoortkj days.” He said that in 1971 or 1972 heseveredlj “heel strings” in desperation. He said whenj was returned to the prison immediately alii surgery, he was put in solitary confinemeirJ “I was handcuffed to the bar,” Carlish “My hands were above my head, my toeswJ barely touching the ground and 1 clothes on. Major Pack took a pair of plienail started to pull hair out from my underart my pubic hairs. He tore the septum of myinJ and crushed my penis.” Carlisle then snowed handcuff scars oi wrists to jurors, who noticeably reacted. . '*• Parents call “Ruck” racist United Press International HOUSTON — A group of black parents has demanded a suburban school district remove “The Adventures of Huckleber ry Finn” from the reading list because it has a character named “Nigger Jim.” The parents’ Thursday night demanded that the book be re moved from a Spring Indepen dent School District reading list and made 11 additional de mands. The Spring school board promised to investigate. Jerry Smith, director of school system communications, said all demands except that concerning Mark Twain’s famous book were presented for the first time Thursday night. Dora Durden, mother of a student at Westfield School, said she believesik trict is insensitive to theneii blacks. “The word ‘nigger 1 is hundreds of times (in book),” she said. Smith said eight studeii asked not to have to reai book were assigned other)) | Glories of lunar flag r eronika M of the Oak fading on office shelf United Press International GARLAND — The only flag in Texas that has been to the moon is now a faded shelf item in a city office, and it will take $1,500 to restore its glory. The lunar souvenir was pre sented to the city of Garland, a Dallas suburb, by astronaut James Irwin during the bicen tennial. The flag faded almost beyond recognition during two years in an outdoor display case. Garland purchasing agent Jack McTavish wants to have the 4-inch-by-6- inch flag he keeps in his office restored, but ex perts at the Kimball Art Museum in Fort Worth and other museums estimate restor ation will cost about $1,500. “We’re willing to spend some money to refurbish it, but not that much,” City Manager Fred Greene said. Irwin took two flags from each state with him on his 1971 trip to the moon. Fifty of the flags are in the Smithsonian In stitution. A member of the Gar land Bicentennial Con)irii9V* 1 arranged for the renHil| Texas flag to be donated til Garland Mayor CharlesJIO (jj said he didn’t know ho* JL the city would be wiin spend on the flag. ■ Un '‘ed Pre ■AMARIIXC “Most of these hisicfOests has do things you can’t put a pw»l' 0 l>c Bish on them,” he said, “butill 511 to pro historical flag — the onlyo^PPort and li Texas that has been totlitJ 6 * nuclear p — and we’re real Victim’s take parents spitwad battle to court loose to seel fccupations.” r Matthiesei Biarillo Dioc Wrged employ Is at Pant ex Ellerorv t'wi i ir United Press International PLANO — Parents of a Plano youth claim he lost the sight in his left eye in a classroom spit- wad fight and are suing the school district and his teacher for $300,000. The suit by Elmer and Dar lene Diggs claims the teacher and school district were negli gent in failing to prevent the fight May 7 in which their son, Paul, was hit in the left eye by what may have been a spitwad or paper clip. The injury left the youth, now 13, with a scarred retina and no forward or peripheral vision. The suit charges the teacher, Betty Bales, was talking with another teacher in an adjoining open classroom when the fight Energy facilit Budear weape I But in a si Wednesday It Itholic, a w the sf.Mnuhiesensai ♦ ♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦ began between f rade boys in two classi ( |!| imoralit pitwad fights occurred w ‘ school two or three dayslU’J‘ty lo e< the youth was injured; l» , ers w ^° thing was done tostoptliffli P °y menl € suit also charges. naneffori * is, the Obla Plano School Attorne) , d , ^ cu * ate > an Akin Jr. said he doesnoii¥?r^ sts ' prese the school district and check f can be held liable. he Solid hopefully “‘^iceful conv pens,” Mat BRAZILIAN MARDI GRASh Brazilian Carnival COSTUME PARTY Feb. 19 8:00 p.m. at the Ramada Inn Ballroom Sponsored by International Student Association