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About The Battalion. (College Station, Tex.) 1893-current | View Entire Issue (June 10, 1982)
etc Battalion/Pagel June 10,1 DWI (continued from page 1) First offenders are normally charged with a misdemeanor. They appear before the county court at law and face a max imum sentence of two years in thecountyjail. Repeat offenders may have to face the Texas De partment of Corrections, which could sentence them to a max imum of five years, Beto said. And despite “being in the booze business,” bar owner Can ter said he strongly supports the anti-DWI campaign — and said other bar owners might use “Drive Sober” bumper stickers. “None of us are for anybody driving around inebriated,” Canter said. “It’s not been un common for me to take some body home when they’re com pletely gone, and they don’t have any friends to take them home.” “By and large, at least on weekdays, we don’t have a lot of trouble,” he said. “And when we do, the troublemaker is general ly not a student.” Canter added that all drink ing establishments were bound by law not to serve alcohol to patrons considered drunk. 92 FM presents) "The Search For The Perfect Cowgirl! However, Canter said, “com pletely gone” people aren’t gen erally a problem at his two estab lishments. “It might make some of them mad, but we’d rather have that than see them get in a wreck. HISS COWGIRL ”10" CONTES Highway 30 (continued from page 1) A Western-Wear Oriented Beauty Competition At GRAHAM CENTRAL STATION Unit y-gentin :d and w [nally su Falklan desolat [The F; ■e unde: heir ini torn Britis M< Before the mall was approved, the city and state were presented in 1980 with a “College Station Mall Traffic Study” from Miller-Watt-Estes Consulting Engineers. In the re port, the following improve ments were assumed to be made before the mall was complete: • Highway 30 would be wide ned from Texas Avenue to the Highway 6 interchange. • Overpasses would be built on the Highway 6 bypass so the frontage roads could be made one-way. • The ‘buttonhook’ ramps at Highway 6 interchange would be moved and changed to ‘slip’ ramps. • A Highway 6 off-ramp would be built south of Highway 30 so mall traffic from the north could bypass the Highway 30 and west frontage road intersec tion. • Traffic signals would be built at the Highway 6 inter change and the mall main entr ance on Highway 30. • Holleman Drive would be extended to the mall. The study assumed that all the improvements listed above were necessary to provide acceptable service around the mall. However, in June 1981, the state told the city no im provements would be made by the State Highway Department of Highways and Public Trans portation. Braniff, Pan Am work on joint operating plan rgaret 1 Preliminaries JUNE 22 finals JUNE 29 In United Press International DALLAS — Officials of bank rupt Braniff International hope by next week to know if a joint operating agreement with Pan American World Airways is feasible. Howard D. Putnam, Braniff s chairman and president, said Tuesday his airline and Pan Am have been involved in explora tory talks since May 24 on whether or not a joint operating agreement could be made to re turn some grounded Braniff planes to the air. “The ball is now in Pan Am’s court,” Putnam said. “As soon as Pan Am draws up an operating plan on paper, I will turn it over to (chief financial officer) M. Philip Guthrie to cost-out. We should have it cost-out in another week.” Putnam said it was to early to tell if an agreement could be reached. Meanwhile, a Fort Worth bankruptcyjudge has scheduled a June 17 hearing to decide whether to appoint a special committee to give Braniff ticket holders a chance to recover some money from the airline, which ceased operations May 12. Under any agreement, the airplanes probably would be flown on former Braniff routes under a contract from Pan Am. The judge also scheduled a June 22 hearing on whether to allow the Dallas-Fort Worth Air port Board to evict Braniff from its world headquarters and ter minal facilities. GRAND PRIZE! A week in the Bahamas for two at Holiday Inn on the beach plus $200 spending money, from Graham Central Station and WTAWI FIRST RUNNER-UP! Falcon II Waterbed with Deluxe Heater and Safety Liner, from Waterbed Gallery! SECOND RUNNER-UP! Ladies CowGirl Boots, from Court's Western Wear! n Unih ilestinia ut by ted in hi eirut wl labib di iged 1 anese le Applications Available At GRAHAM CENTRAL STATION, WTAW, WATERBED GALLERY or COURT'S WESTERN WEAR DEADLINE FOR APPLICATIONS JUNE 15! They (tl es, beg eli Arrr tn told r the gn tructure itate-rur |govern: MU* srael’s F in was today t< : role in lace the anon fr lunation labib, a met Leb Mondax ost fou i estimate oos*. O CONTEST is trappi : of the Saturday, June 12 1:00 p.m. labib, i isaleni i commei ond say I today." ace is in Israeli t; in ht. The 's main only w lr ut stroi hstians. With h Post Oak Mall June is National Dairy Month! So, in honor of old Bossie, Post Oak Mall is having a cowmilking contest. Mayors, fire chiefs, radio, T.V. and newspaper personalities will be doing their “utter” best, starting at 1:00 p.m., Saturday in Post Oak Mall. Donations benefit Consolidated Honor Choir in their “Aim for Austria.” Cow compliments of Texas A&M Dairy Center Texas 6 Bypass at Hwy. 30 College Station, Texas Open Monday-Saturday 10 a.m.-9 p.m. Mike major te stinj techni