% Page 12/The Battalion/Thursday, April 28, 1983 Thursday WALTON HALL 1st Annual Cano<* Trij? 15own chM - Guadalupe is scheduled for Saturday. For more informatioll call 260-5979. OVAL OAKsS RACQUET CLUB:The Royal Oaks Racquet^ hall Spiing Open is sclieduled at the Royal Oaks Racquet Glut today, Saturday and Sunday. Divisions include. Mens open, ft C, novice and doubles and Womens open, B, novice and dou hies. For more information, call 846-8724. Entry closes at 6 p.mt U xlay. There is a $20 entry fee for the first event and $ 10 for the! second event. CAMPUS CRUSADE FOR CHRIST:A meeting is scheduled for 7:30 p.m. in 113 Kleberg. Everyone is welcome. BAPTIST STUDENT UNION:A dinner, honoring interna tional students, is scheduled for Saturday at 7 p.m. at the Baptist Student Union, 201 College Main (behind Kinkos). Everyone i! invited — free — and special music will be featured. BAC:“Voices of Praise'* — a special guest Endtime Evangelist Pentecostal Church choir will be featured during the "Spring' Fest" scheduled for 7:30 p.m. at the MSC Ballroom. “Kasnim,” an end-of-school party, is scheduled for Friday from 8 p.m. to ? All meml>ers interested in receiving information this summer about the "Welcome Back and Welcome to A&M Fish Camp’’, please leave your name and address at the BAC cubicle in 216 MSC (SPO). TAMU FENCING CLUB:An end-of-the-year party is schc duled for 7 p.m. at 1404 Southwest Village Apts. Call Stmie at 696-6912 for directions. TEXAS A&M EMERGENCY CARE TEAM:Spring elections are scheduled for 7 p.m. at the Health Center Cafeteria, Point sheets are due. TAMLJ 1,-5 CLUB:A general discussion of space issues and future activities, and 1983-84 officer elections are scheduled for 8:30 p.m. in 308 Rudder. MSC TOWN HALL: Tickets for the Joan Jett concert are on sale at the MSC Box Office. The concert is scheduled for Thursday at 8 p.m. in G. Rollie White Coliseum. CLASS OF *86:Class of ’86 picnic tickets are on sale now through Friday at the MSC Box Office. MARINE TECHNOLOGY SOCIETY:The Fourth Annual Speaker Exchange & Buffet Banquet is scheduled for Sattirday 11 a.m. at the 11th Floor Rudder. Reservations, due early Thursday, may be made through Curt Olson at 260-6905 or at the Ocean Engineering Department, 845-4515. Admission is $7 per student and $15 per Industry. Gionnotti Sc Associates will speak on "Design of a Floating Ocean Plant Concept,” Hahn & Clay Co. will speak on "A 3010 foot Dive to the Bottom of the Pacific Ocean,” Oceaneering Inti, will speak on “Remote Ser vices — R.O.V., A.D.S. ana Manipulators” and Dr. Andrews will speak on “Tanker Pollution — Updated Information." CATHOLIC STUDENT ASSOCIATION: International stu dents will meet at 8 p.m. at the student center. CLASS OF ’84: Applications are now' available for the Executive Council. Get your application in 216 MSG and get involved! CHI ALPHA CHRISTIAN:A prayer meeting is scheduled from noon to 1 p.m. at the All Faiths Chapel Meditation room INTERNATIONAL DEVELOPMENT FORUM:Norbert Danhausser and Norman Thomas of the anthropology depart ment will speak on “Development: the Cultural Dimension” at 7:30 p.m. in 302 Rudder. ULTRALIGHT FLYING ORGANIZATION:A meeting is scheduled for 7:30 p.m. in 504 Rudder. TAMU ROADRUNNERS:Elections followed by a year-end celebration at the Hall of Fame are scheduled for 7 p.ra. in 410 Rudder. MECHANIZED AGRICULTURE CLUB.The Spring Ban quet is scheduled at the Quanset-Huts with refreshments served at 6:30 p.m. and a BBQ dinner at 7:30 p.m. Neal Black will speak and Awards will be presented. Tickets are $5 per person. MSC CEPHEID VARIABLE:"Attack of the Killer Tomatoes” will be shown at 7:30 p.m. and 9:45 p.m. in 701 Rudder.! Admission is $1. •iMECHA&IZED AGRICULTURE CLUB:The AnmiafBani quet will be held at the Quonset Hut B. Happy hour begins at 6:30 p.m. and dinner at 7:30 p.m. UNIVERSITY LUTHERAN CHAPEL;The group meets at 6:30 p.m. at the University Lutheran Chapel, 315 N. College Main, College Station ana leaves for the Sherwood Nursing Home to sing and visit the residents. If you have an item for “What’s Up,” yon 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. Message taped by murderer United Press International NEW YORK — A week be fore he was electrocuted in a ru ral Alabama prison, John Louis Evans III, 33, videotaped a re morseful message condemning the murder he died for. “God knows right now I’ve even reached the point where, you know, if it were possible to give up my life to give his back, I wouldn’t hesitate a second to do so,” Evans said in a tape aired Wednesday on CBS. The drifter from Beaumont was executed Friday at Holman Prison for the 1977 slaying of Mobile, Ala., pawnbroker Ed ward Nassar during a holdup. The videotape made by pris on chaplin Martin Weber, a Mennonite, was recorded in Holman April 17, five days be fore Evans was electrocuted. Weber said Evans had a burning desire to try and point young people away from the criminal life he led. Three 30-second surges of electricity were administered be fore Evans’ heart was still and prison doctors pronounced him dead. Father Kevin Duignan, who became Evans’ spiritual con fidant during his six-year stay on death row, said the condemned man wanted the tape to be used as an educational weapon against crime. “My name is John Evans and I’m on death row in Alabama and I’m scheduled to be ex ecuted in about four days. “I felt there are some impor tant things that I should say and if you’re smart you’re going to listen and you’re going to learn a little something,” Evans said in the tape. Weber and an Alabama Pris on Commissioner were inter viewed by CBS’ Diane Sawyer in the segment aired on the net work’s morning news show. Evans feared if the message was made public before the ex ecution people would conclude he was using the appeal to his personal advantage, so he de manded it remain confidential until he was dead, Weber said. The chaplin quoted Evans as saying, “After I’m dead and gone you may release it. “I’m here for committing murder, for killing a man. I can’t give back the wife her husband. I can’t give back the kids their father. You know, taking the life of another human being is just almost too horrible, you know, to think about. “I guess I’ve relived it over in my head 100 times and a lot of times, you know, course I’m overcome with a sense of re morse, you know, for him and his family.” Weber said the recording would be shown to adolescents, specifically in the 12 to 15 age group, because as Evans looked back in his life, that’s where it all began. “It got to the place he just couldn’t live with himself any more,” Weber said. “He just said he just had to cry out to God for mercy and ask God to forgive him. He made a commitment to Jesus Christ and that’s where he found the answer.” The Store Worth Looking For! % ifag f i Factory Authorized: \ Vo* est )ing businofl ?vent and li* 0 idvantagec ight off tkl pioixieen x. RECEIVERS- SX-5 »■ (T O' 0* i Now Reg. $325.00 *I89* 5 j Continuous average power output is 30 watts per channel mm. at 8 ohms from 20-20.000 Hz with no more than 0.02% total harmonic distor tion; Non-switching circuitry; DC power am plifier; six AM and six FM preset stations, station scan, and digital frequency display; Elec tronic (touch) function and tuning selection. 40% off! 0) a> SX-7 Continuous average power output is 60 watts per channel min. at 8 ohms froml ! !- 20,000 Hz with no more lhan 0.009% total harmonic distortion; DC pow amplifier ; eight AM and eight FM preset stations, station scan, Digital diiplaycf frequency, volume, and time; Electronic (touch) function, tuning, and vobt control*; Moving coil cartridge capability. S9TII9! Reg. $550.00 ^Qyy SX-8 100 watts continuous average power per channel minimum at 8 ohms from 20- 20,000 Hz with no more than 0.005% total harmonic distortion; totally computer controlled now switching circuitry; DC power amplifier and digital display of frequency, volume, tone, and time. - - ~~ ^ ^ Reg. $800.00 Now k TURNTABLES PL-4 Auto-return direct drive turntable with statically balanced low mass Polymar Graphite , ' < traight pipe tone arm. _ B _ ^ _ Now*99* 5 1 ■CASSETTE DECKS SAVE CT-4 Stereo Cassette Deck with Dolby* “B/C” NR System/Soft-Touch Operation Motor: Electronically-controlled DC-servo motor Wow & Rutter: 0.05% (WRMS) S/N Ratio: 57dB** (Dolby off) Frequency Response (- 20dB): 25 — 18.000Hz (metal tape) CT-5 Stereo Cassette Deck with Dolby* “B/C” NR System//C Full-Logic Control System Motor: Electronically-controlled DC- servo motor Wow & Rutter: 0.5% (WRMS) S/N Ratio: 57dB** (Dolby off) Frequency Response (—20dB): 25 — 18,000Hz (metal tape) Now *149 00 PL-5 Fully automatic direct drive turnta ble with 0.014% wow & flutter. Only *H9 95 Now * I f 9* 5 SPEAKERS MIRROR IMAGE SPEAKERS NEW FROM PL-44F Front-loading fully automatic turntable with moving-coil type cartridge. Now Only s *95 5 ^V S-510 S-710 S-910 10 inch 3 way ported speaker with a frequency response of 35 Hz — 50 kHz. Reg. $200.00/ea. Now * i ir/ 12 inch 3 way ported speaker rated at 60 watts; 180 watts music power. Reg. $250.00/ea. Now! * 179% Frequency response of 30 Hz — 50 kHz with 80 watts rated power, 240 watts music power, > ■ t tr *F'-t AK / 12 inch; 3 way ported. Ml Reg. $300.00/ea. I1UW. ,( CAR STEREOS KEX-20 AM/FM stereo cassette deck with electronic tuning system; Dolby; separate bass/treble controls; preset 5 AM, 10 FM stations; LED band indicators. Reg. $300.00. Now Only J 229 95 -CAR SPEAKERS KP-8500 This in-dash cassette deck has a Dol- Now Only by* noise reduction system for both tape and FM • modes. Supertuner AM/FM circuitry. A I79» stereo/mono switch. Local/distance switch. Volume, tone and balance controls. Automatic muting on FM stereo. Locking fast forward and rewind. And auto matic qect. KP-1500 New from Pioneer. . . in dash cassette deck with AM/FM stereo, locking fast forward, FM muting, volume, tone fit balance controls and power antenna activator. Now $999; TS-106 4” single cone; 7 oz. magnet maximum input 20 watts. Reg. $50.00. Now s 34 ,s TS692 Dual cone speaker with 20 oz. magnets and mai' imum input of 20 watts. Now M9 95 TS 1211 Singl e cone speaker. Reg. $30.00. 'A Price! «25« While they last! CUSTOM 3806 Old College Rd. — Next to Triangle Bowl This is no hot air balloon. . . Prices are really dropping! Come on down to Custom Sounds! CUSTOM SOUNDS l ★] TRIANGLE • BOWL OPEN MON.-SAT. g ^ TEWS U MU uNims |, '| 10-6 T3L, Co, -LEge WEUSC*' | ROAD 846-5803