The Battalion. (College Station, Tex.) 1893-current, April 13, 1983, Image 7

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    Wednesday, April 13, 1983/The Battalion/Page 7
Tribes get second chance
at retaining state funding
United Press International
AUSTIN — Texas’ two In
dian tribes have persuaded
Attorney General Jim Mattox to
reconsider a recent opinion cut
ting the tribes’ state funding.
Mattox ruled March 22 that
the Alabama-Coushatta reserva
tion near Livingston was no lon
ger considered a reservation
under federal law and therefore
might not be eligible to receive
state funds. The opinion also
could affect the Tigua reserva
tion in El Paso.
Monday Mattox said he
would reconsider whether the
tribes are entitled to funding.
His opinion could affect $1 mil
lion in funding already ear
marked for the tribes by the Sen
ate Finance Committee this
year.
“It’s my understanding
they’re going to maintain the
status quo until this issue is re
solved,” said Don Miller, an
attorney from the Native Amer
ican Rights Fund.
Miller is representing the Ala
bama-Coushatta tribe located on
a 4,351-acre reservation in east
Texas. The Tigua reservation
near El Paso encompasses 38
acres.
Elna Christopher, a spokes
woman for Mattox, confirmed
the attorney general’s office
would review the opinion. “We’ll
be looking at it again, including
the information they supplied
us with,” she said.
The funding problem was ex
posed last week by Comptroller
Bob Bullock, who said he would
continue the state’s 50-year
practice of making payments to
the Texas Indian Commission
for the tribes until Mattox clar
ified his opinion.
Alabama-Coushatta Chief
Robert Fulton Battise said
through an interpreter that
Mattox had agreed to review his
decision with the concerns and
input from the tribe in mind.
Restoration plan endorsed
United Press International
AUSTIN — A long-term pre
servation plan to restore and im
prove the fire-ravaged Texas
Capitol building has been en
dorsed by the Texas Society of
Architects.
A portion of the plan,
approved Monday, would call
for a fulltime architect to over
see work on Texas’ “premier
state building.”
Interest in renovating and re
storing the massive pink granite
building has grown since a Feb.
6 lire nearly destroyed the his
toric structure that is the symbol
of Texas’ state government.
The Legislature has approp
riated $7 million to repair the
damages to the east wing. The
pre-dawn fire, which threatened
to engulf the whole building, be
gan in the lieutenant governor’s
private apartment, killing one
overnight guest.
Architect Allen McCree of
Austin said the language in a bill
sponsored by Rep. Hugo Ber-
langa, D-Corpus Christi, “leaves
no doubt in anybody’s mind”
that the 95-year-old building is
to be restored to its original
form.
The House Cultural and His
torical Resources Committee
Monday night referred to a sub
committee three bills, including
a Senate-passed measure, that
deal with restoration of the
Capitol and preserving the view
of the building.
Berlanga’s bill would create
the Capitol Preservation Board,
composed of the governor,
lieutenant governor and Speak
er of the House, to develop a
long-term preservation plan to
maintain and restore the build
ing, its contents and its grounds.
!
’•6
The man and his music
staff photo by Eric Evan Lee
in dm
John Sharp, a marketing senior from guitar and sings in front of Rudder
Farmington, New Mexico, plays his Tower during the craft festival Tuesday.
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APPLICATIONS
For cubicle space in the SPO, Room 216,
MSC are now available. These applications
may be picked up at the secretaries’ island in
the SPO and are due by Tuesday, April 19.
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ed.
Wednesday Night is
50 c Margarita Night at
DOUGLAS JEWELRY
15% STUDENT DISCOUNT
WITH CURRENT A&’M ID
(REPAIRS NOT INCLUDED)
Keepsake
Registered Diamond Rings
PULSAR, SEIKO,
BULOVA & CROTON
WATCHES
AGGIE JEWELRY
USE YOUR STUDEMT DISCOUNT TO PURCHASE A
DIAMOND EOR YOUR CLASS RING (AND LET US SET
IT EOR YOU)
212 M. Main AND Culpepper Plaza
Downtown Bryan College Station
822-3119 693-0677
MC VISA DINNERS CLUB AM EXPRESS
LAYAWAYS INVITED
5th
Anniversary
SALE
Now in progress
thru Mother’s Day
( jneirLGDrn? )
404 East University Drive
College Station,Texas 77840
(409) 693-4544
j
Margaritas by the glass 5(Y
Margaritas by the pitcher $ 6 00
Buy a pitcher & we'll throw in
an order of nachos for $1.00
VEI^YTHING
A
^Culpepper Plaza
696
-7773 ,
MSC • TOWN • HALL
C the DLQGKMEAI3T6
in concert
Thursday, April 28
in
G. Rollie White Coliseum
Tickets $ 7 50 , $ 8 50 , $ 9 00
MSC Box Office 845-1234
Nobody cooks
their chicken like
Tnisley's Chicken 'n Rolls.
■Freshly brewed
iced tea.
Light 'n crispy.
Plump,
Grade A chicken.
Cooked in 100%
pure vegetable oil
Big ol'fries
crunchy on the outside
tender inside.
Hot rolls baked
fresh from scratch.
Nobody but Tinsley's Chicken'n Rolls cooks
plump, Grade A chickens in the natural goodness
of 100% pure vegetable oil. Tinsley's Chicken'n
Rolls light'n crispy chicken not only tastes better,
it's better for you.
Tinsley's Chicken'n Rolls bakes their rolls
Pure country honey.
fresh from scratch, right before your eyes. We
serve our famous rolls steamin' hot with pure
country honey.
One taste and you'll never settle for ordi
nary chicken and plastic bag rolls again. Nobody
cooks chicken like Tinsley's Chicken'n Rolls.
Chick'n Special!
2 Pieces of Chicken
with 2 Rolls
95ft:
705 N. Texas Ave.
822-2819
512 Villa Maria Rd.
822-5277
1905 Texas Ave.
College Station 693-1669
Offer expires 4/25/83
Chicken
’n rolls
70 Pieces of Chicken
with 70 Rolls
$4.69
705 N. Texas Ave.
822-2819
512 Villa Maria Rd.
822-5277
1905 Texas Ave.
College Station 693-1669
Offer expires 4/25/83
Chicken
’n rolls