The Battalion. (College Station, Tex.) 1893-current, March 03, 1983, Image 10

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    There's always something happening at
national
Battalion/Page if
March 3,19831
'atti
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★ VIDEO GAMES
Thursday
What’s Up
49
HAPPY HOUR
MON.-FRI. 4:30-6:00
A GREAT LUNCHEON BUFFET
(Ail You Can Eat) — Pizza, Spaghetti & Salad Bar
Old Time and Current Movies
(Three Stooges, etc.)
Eveiy Tuesday Night is Spaghetti Nite.
To Go Pizza — you bet. All Stores have drive thru win
dows. We also deliver.
University Square 846-3421
Shiloh Place 693-0035
Private Meeting Rooms for a cozy 12-15 or a 80 seat
banquet. Please call for information.
WILDERNESS LEADERSHIP ASSOCIATION: A hook sale
is scheduled from 8 a.m. to 2 p.rn. at the MSC.
JUMPROPE FOR HEART.The physical education depart
ment and the American Heart Association are sponsoring jum-
prope for Heart, a fund raiser, Saturday from 9:30 a.m. to
11:30 a.m. in 303 E. Kyle. For more information and entry
forms go by 158 E. Kyle.
CAMPUS CRUSADE FOR CHRIST:A meeting issched^
for 7:30 p.m. in 113 Kleburg.
TAMU FENCING CLUB:A meeting is scheduled for7puj
267 E. Kyle. 1
THE 31ST ANNUAL KIWANIS PANCAKE DAYiTbj
Kiwanis Clubs of Brazos County will serve pancakes ail
Brazos Center this Saturday from 1 1 a.m. to 8 p.m. Ticket!!
S3 for adults and $2 for children under 12.
BLACK AWARENESS COM MI ETEE:The formal is still!
UNIVERSITY LUTHERAN CHAPEL:Share/Growth
Group — an opportunity to reflect on the week and grow from
the experience — will meet at 9 p.m. at the University Lutheran
Chapel, 315 N. College Main, College Station. The group will
meet at 10 p.m. at the University Lutheran Chapel then go to
the Sherwood Nursing Home to sing and visit with residents.
£
AGGIE COWBOYS
1ST ANNUAL
SOFTBALL
ROUND-UP
CATHOLIC STUDENT ASSOCIATION:Married Students
will hold a covered dish supper at 6 p.m. in the student center.
On and off-campus Catholics will meet at 8 p.m. at the student
center then go to the Hall of Fame.
TOYOTA OWNERS ASSOCIATION:Parts order will be
taken during a meeting at 7:30 p.m. in 321 Physics.
ASPA.’Walt Baker, president of Brazos Valley Personnel Associa
tion, will speak at 7:30 p.m. in 151 A&A.
AGRICULTURE ECONOMICS CLUB.David Howard of
Cargill will speak at 7:30 p.m. in 110 Harrington.
MSC CEPHEID VARIABLE:“Firefox," with Clint Eastwood,
wall be shown at 7:30 p.m. and 10 p.m. in Rudder Theater.
ALPHA LAMBDA DELTA (FRESHMAN HONOR
SOCIETY):Pledging —- all freshmen with at least a 3.5 GPA,
having completed at least 15 hours, are elegible for member
ship at 6 p.m. in the MSC Ballroom.
INDIA ASSOCIATIONS General meeting is scheduled for 8
p.m. in 301 Rudder. Membership applications are still available.
For more information call 260-1896 or 693-0389.
It will be Saturday from 8 p.m. to 1 a.m. at the Aggielandll
Tickets will be sold today through Friday at Rudder BoxO(f|
and Saturday at the d<x)r. $5.50 single, $8 a couple.
GUATEMALAN STUDENT ASSOClATION lntenJ
al Week arrangements will be discussed at 7 pm. in HO-AMiflunited Pres
SOCIOLOGY CLUB:A general meeting is scheduled for ^ 11
p.m. in 123 Academic Building. oin ^
EI.ECTION COMMITTEE: Upcoming elections will
sed at 8:30 p.m. in 203 MSC. i1k , Kn ,
Friday
; 1W1 history
TAMU CHESS CLUB:A meeting is scheduled for 7 p.m.indNever befo
Rudder. Players of all strengths are welcome. (ball teams
INTERNATIONAL STUDENT ORGANIZATION kched such li
Administrative Council meeting is scheduled for 7 p.m. in - A, Kansas
Rudder. jitli’rated N<
UNIVERSITY LUTHERAN CHAPEL.Grad uate studef |
and singles over 22 will meet at 6 p.m. at the University I 1 11
an Chapel. 315 N. College Main. College Station, theneo , f u tom tf 11
for supper. |4 as one o
• . a ‘r c anywt
UGM:A Bible study is scheduled for 6:15 p.m. at the A&Mr|K s w jU C() nj
sbyterian Church. ' “This will I
Litliwest Co
ULTRALIGHT FLYING ORGANIZAT ION: Fhe April 17
fly-in will be discussed at 7:30 p.m. in 305 Physics.
TAMU ICE HOCKEY T*EAM:This weekend’s games in Au
stin will be discussed at 8 p.m. on the second floor of Sterling C.
Evans Library.
March 5-6 Central Park (C.S.)
Men’s Class A & B
(Limited to first 32 paid entries at $ 65 00 )
INTER-VARSITY CHRISTIAN FELLOWHSIP:Sins P\
sharingand discussion of Habakkuk will Ik* featured at 7 p.: El Arkansas
50-1 Rudder. ^^nid. Tt ha
MSC AGGIE CINEMAUEirst Blood.” starring Sylvester'>t rence ga '
lone, will be shown tonight and Saturday at 8 p.m. in Rudd«f, a ^ ut
Auditorium. “Young Doctors in Love” will be shown at Ms au
night tonight and Saturday in Rudder Theater. Admissior{U 1 ; 1 '
$1.50 with a Texas A&M I.D. for each movie. . . ansas P
ini led tin
Gas leak believed cause
y haven’t lo
■ars and ha
ouston in Fa
■But this h
CALL TODAY...
ONLY 7 OPENINGS LEFT!
: Double Elimination
; Tropies: 1st thru 6th (team)
; Shirts: 1st thru 3rd (individual)
; 10 All-Tourney Awards
ALSO: HOME RUN DERBY
Saturday from 4:00-6:00
- For more info call: James Cesarini 693-5606
or Joey Panozzo 696-5739
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Apartment blast kills one
■ coming t
i tonight.
‘ "Night in at
■said, “Ho
United Press International
GREENVILLE, N.C. — An
explosion believed caused by
leaking gas ripped through a
three-story apartment building
housing mostly college students
shortly before dawn Tuesday,
killing one person and injuring
at least 12 others.
“We heard people screaming.
There was a girl that had been
blown into a tree that was beside
the apartments,” said Frank
Gargano, who lives in a building
across from the one that was des
troyed.
Gargano said the girl re
ceived only a cut on her fore
head.
Police First said two people
had been killed in the explosion,
but at mid-morning they said
the death toll was one.
“I opened my eyes and there
was smoke everywhere,” said Vi
vien Lo, a foreign student
attending East Carolina Univer
sity. “I had been blown to the
other side of my bed.”
Sue Holloman, resident man
ager of the Village Green apart
ment complex, said 40 to 45 peo
ple lived in the building, which
has 26 apartments. Holloman
said six to eight apartments were
destroyed or heavily damaged.
“It’s unconfirmed, but it
seems there was a gas explosion
in the laundry room,” she said.
Police Capt. John Briley said
the explosion ripped through
the building at 5:40 a.m., and
rescuers sorted through the
wreckage throughout the morn
ing looking for more victims.
Holloman said she lives about
two miles away from the com
plex and heard the explosion.
am in colleg
Houston (‘
“I didn't know what it e No. 1 spot
she said. “Then a few mins| nnin S 1'^
later I got a call.” ou^.n s Iasi I
Holloman said about 75[®y o to , a N
cent of the residents of thee as playing
plex are students attendingt| n M )Son
Carolina University.
rourteen
avfc been in
Lo’s apartment was nexilb
one that had been destro«|g^
She said she looked out her*w^ ^™
dow and saw a man wearingKE
shorts sitting on a car shivenB
af ter his apartment had btS
destroyed. She said she gave®
man a blanket.
>
SaueonyO
Itri-state sporting good
TWO DATS ONLY!
10%-60% OFF!
in
SPECIAL
Shoe
Goo
s-| 95
per tube
EVERY RUNNING, JOGGING,
SOFTBALL AND RACQUET
SPORT SHOE IN STOCK
SPECIAL
Shoe
Goo
$-| 95
Six killed in Alaska,
shooting suspect held
I
United Press International
McCarthy, Alaska —
Police arrested a man suspected
of killing six people and wound
ing two others Tuesday in a
shooting spree in a remote min
ing community described as a
“virtual ghost town,” authorities
said.
Word of the killings reached
Alaska State Police when one of
the wounded, a man shot in the
head, was flown out on a mail
plane early in the day from
McCarthy, 225 miles east of
Anchorage, 50 miles from the
Yukon border.
trooper inf ormation officer I
Anchorage. I
“They did find six bodies, 1
said. “The suspect himselfkil
been wounded sometimedurir®
After reports that the suspect
was barricaded in his home,
troopers converged on McCar
thy in helicopters and planes
and arrested the man without
incident, said Paul Edscorn, a
the day, apparently it wasakni
wound in the leg.”
The wounded victim, i
ported in serious condition,«
taken to Faith Hospital in Glerl
nallen, located 100 miles noi
west of McCarthy, Edscorn
All items subject to prior sale.
Sizes and quantities
Limited on some shoes
Friday & Saturday Mar. 3-4
NO RAIN CHECKS
DOORS OPEN 9 A.M.
Puma, Brooks, Nike NBS,
Foot-Joy, Bata, Spot-bilt,
Converse, NCAA, Sport-
master
EMridae
Cleaver
SPEAKS ON
America’s Future S
the World Reuolution
Topics include: Reaganomics. The Crisis ol Capitalism, America and
South Africa, Poland, Terrorism and Violence
TM-State makes the Outdoors
ONESTOP
SPORTS SHOP
LARGEST SPORTS SHOP
IN THE BRAZOS VALLEY
ftJN?
Tri-State Sporting Goods 3600 Old College Rd.
846-4743
ItHTMOl