Page 14/The Battalion/Thursday, April 7, 1983
What’s Up
Thursday
ULTRALIGHT FLYING ORGANIZATION^ Fly-In is
scheduled for 7:30 p.in. in 407AB Rudder. This is an important
meeting, so members, please attend.
MSG TOWN HALLrTickets for the Joan Jett concert, April 28
at 8 p.m. in G. Rollie White, are now on sale at the MSC Box
Office.
STUDENT GOVERNMENT: Applications for 1983-1984
University Committee positions will be accepted now until April
15. Pick up your application now at the Student Programs
Office or Student Government Office in The Pavilion.
TEXAS A&M EMERGENCY CARE TEAM: Tickets for the
banquet will be sold at a meeting at 7 p.m. in 510 Rudder. Today
is the last day tickets will be sold.
CATHOLIC STUDENT ASSOCIATION:International stu
dents will meet at 8 p.m. at the student center. Off-campus
Catholics will meet at 9 p.m. in the Barcelona party room.
MSC AMAT EUR RADIO:Officer elections and fate of shack
equipment will be discussed at 7 p.m. in 140 MSC.
MSC CEPHE1D VARI ABLE:“20,000 Leagues Under the Sea”
will be shown at 7:30 p.m. and 9:45 p.m. in 701 Rudder.
TAU BETA PI ENGINEERING HONOR SOCIETY:Of-
ficer elections are scheduled for 7 p.m. in 103 Zachry.
SOCIETY FOR ENTREPRENEURSHIP AND NEW
VENTURES:Student entrepreneurs will hold a panel discus
sion at 7 p.m. in 120 A&A.
PUERTO RICAN STUDENT ASSOCIATION:Officer
elections for ’83-’84 are scheduled for 7 p.m. in 308 Rudder.
AGRICULTURE ECONOMICS CLUB:Officer elections are
scheduled for 7:30 p.m. in 110 Harrington. All members are
encouraged to vote.
CLASS OF ’86 VET' SCHOOL:An open horse show is sche
duled for April 24 at the Equestrian Park (Farm Road 60).
There will be both Western and English Divisions. Mail entries
to Kathy Bartholomew, P.O. Box 7271, College Station, Tx.
77840.
Rape bill abolishes
husbands’ immunitv
HILLEL CLUB: Psychologist Rudolph Roden, a holocaust survi
vor, will speak on “The Imprintof the Holocaust Experience” at
8 p.m. in 302 Rudder.
SENIOR CLASS.'Champs Sporting Goods/Graham’s Central
Station Softball Classic Team Captain’s meeting is scheduled
for 7 p.m. in 302 Rudder.
INTRAMURAL-RECREATIONAL SPORTS:Softball play-
off schedules will be posted at 3 p.m. in the Intramural Office
* “ do
(159 E. Kyle). Golf doubles begin today.
CHI ALPHA:Intercessory Prayer Meeting is scheduled from
noon to 1 p.m. at the AH Faiths Chapel Meditation room.
ENGLISH HONOR SOCIETY:Officer elections will be held
and G.P.R. requirements will be discussed at 7 p.m. in 156 A&A.
MSC VARIET Y SHOW:Tickets for the MSC Variety Show,
April 15 (Parent’s weekend) at 7:30 p.m., are now on sale at
Rudder Box Office.
PEER ADVISOR PROGRAM:Applications for this summer
are available in 108 YMCA. This is your chance to get involved
and have fun too.
SCHEDULING OFFICE: All student organizations are encour
aged to submit room reservation requests for fall 1983, now
through April 15.
If you have an item for “What’s Up,” you can fill out a notice in
216 Reed McDonald at least two days in advance of the activ
ity. No items are accepted by phone.
Woman identifies
boxer as attacker
United Press International
TOPEKA, Kan. — A major
proponent of a bill to change
Kansas rape laws to include rape
within a marriage says she is sur
prised the measure passed the
Legislature in only one session.
“I think it’s a very progressive
move for the state and for
women,” Rep. Wanda Fuller, R-
Wichita, said Tuesday. “Many
times ideas of this magnitude
take two to three sessions.”
Under a bill sent to the gov
ernor Tuesday, Kansas rape
laws would change from giving
immunity to husbands to mak
ing all acts of rape a felony.
If the bill is signed by Gov.
John Carlin, Kansas would join
10 states and the District of Col
umbia which make no allo
wances for a rapist who is mar
ried to the victim.
Other states which treat rape
within a marriage the same as
outside of a marriage are Cali
fornia, Florida, Georgia, Mas
sachusetts, Mississippi, Nebras
ka, New Jersey, Oregon, Virgi
nia and Minnesota, Fuller said.
Kansas currently is one of 1 1
states providing spouses a gen
eral exemption from prosecu
tion of rape charges. Others are
Alabama, Connecticutt, Illinois,
Montana, Oklahoma, South
Dakota, Texas, Vermont,
Washington and West Virginia.
House members voted 66-55
agreeing with the Senate to re
move the immunity spouses re
ceive from prosecution. When
the bill first passed the House, it
specified two crimes — rape
with a person who is i
spouse and aggravated]
within a marriage.
" 1 lie marriage cep
il( >esii't give win a license
any t hing to your spouse tin
couldn’t do without thatct
cate,” Rep. Robert Frevl
Liberal, argued Tuesday.
Rep. Betty Jo Ch;
Lawrence, criticized a
she said was held by:
representatives.
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Haas Hall presents
United Press International
PATERSON — A rape victim
identified boxer Tony Ayala Jr.
as the man who attacked her on
New Year’s Day, according to
testimony at Ayala’s assault trial.
Totowa patrolman Carl
Cifaldi told Passaic County Su
perior Court on Tuesday that he
stopped the shoeless and shirt
less junior welterweight in the
parking lot outside the victim’s
apartment shortly after the 5:30
a.m. attack in West Paterson.
The officer told the nine-
woman, seven-man jury that he
led Ayala back to the victim’s
apartment, and she looked at
him through a sliding glass win
dow before identifying him.
Ayala, 19, is accused of rap
ing the 30-year-old woman and
threatening her roommate, 29,
with a knife. He was indicted
Jan. 10 on charges of breaking
into the apartment — across the
street from his own — making
terroristic threats, threatening
to kill, aggravated sexual assault
and unlawful possession of a
weapon.
Cifaldi, who helped in the in
vestigation and arrest, said he
was told by the women that their
attacker was a drunken Hispanic
male, and he stopped Ayala be
cause he appeared to fit the de
scription.
ige mm
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THIS WEEK’S SPECIALS
Defense laywer William De
Marco had previously told the
jurors that he will prove that the
victim actually knew Ayala as
her neighbor and agreed to have
sex with him. He claimed that
had Ayala planned an assault or
rape, he never would have
allowed both women to get such
a good look at him.
Registration: 1st Floor MSC
April 11 & 12 (9-4)
Date of Olympiad: April 23
Sponsored by Carnation, Coke, and Coors.
r
West Paterson police officers
earlier testified that the room
mate identified Ayala at West
Paterson police headquarters as
the man who had threatend her.
Silver mining scheme
promoters stand trial
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United Press International
TUCSON, Ariz. — Dozens of
investors mainly from Dallas
and Phoenix were bilked out of
almost $150,000 by a scheme to
remove valuable silver from
waste ore discarded near the
frontier town of Tombstone, a
prosecutor said.
Gerald S. Frank, an assistant
U.S. attorney, presented open
ing arguments Tuesday in the
fraud case against John Durkin
and Henry Farabee, promoters
of Silver Bonanza Mine.
A U.S. District Court jury was
told the mining venture was
doomed before it began because
the pair invested in the business
only a small part of the proceeds
they received from the sale of
unregistered securities by mail.
Tombstone currently has
commercially successful mining
enterprises. Frank told jurors,
however, that Durkin, a pros
pector, and Farabee, a construc
tion contractor, only planned a
get-rich-quick scheme.
Defense attorney James M.
Elliott did not deny that inves
tors lost money but said the two
promoters only were guilty of
enthusiasm, optimism and a lack
of vision. There was no intent to
defraud, he said.
Wis. votes down
nuclear dump site
United Press International
MILWAUKEE — Federal
officials have looked longingly
at Wisconsin as a site for nuclear
waste dumps, but, in the nation’s
first statewide referendum on
the subject, Wisconsin voters
told the government they do not
want the dumps.
Voters Tuesday resounding
ly — by a margin of more than
half a million votes — told Fed
eral Energy officials the state
should not be a repository for
high-level, radioactive wastes.
Cassandra Dixon, a spokes
man for the Lake Superior Re
gion Radioactive Waste Project,
said the vote shows that Wiscon
sin is not interested in becoming
a nuclear guinea pig for the sake
of keeping the nuclear industry
in business.
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The Department of Energy,
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They have looked at Wisconsin
because of its granite bedrock in
the north.
Opponents said the “no” vote
gives Wisconsin a strong bar
gaining position in negotiations
with DOE on waste disposal
sites.
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‘COMMONS
‘BLOOD MOBILES at
A&A and
SBISA HALL
APRIL 4, 5, 6, 7
AGGIE BLOOD DRIVE
organized by
Student Government
APO and OPA
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But why do you need the American Express Card now?
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