The Battalion. (College Station, Tex.) 1893-current, June 07, 1983, Image 3

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    Tuesday, June 7,1983/The Battalion/Page 3
Free U class sign-up to be
|eld Thursday and Friday
d
by Angel Stokes
Battalion Staff
Bitterbugging, bartending,
rafting, hiking, exercising and
fociali/ing are some of the activi
ties offered through the Memo-
B Student Center this
[ Wsign-up for MSC Free U clas-
. B will run from 10 a.m. to 6
llls “ p.ni. Thursday and Friday in
So muciRooni 226 in the MSC.
can’tiBThis summer 10 classes are
'es ofnuBered, lasting from two to 10
tergatc- w ?cks and costing between
alco, $9.50 and $25.
re-elettiBCourses offered are: begin-
" acn Bg Country and Western
"jPHicing, advanced Country and
Western dancing, two Jitterbug
' s testmKses, wine appreciation, bar-
case, fs-|
i thestT
ite He
tending and four fitness classes
— ener-jazz, aerobic exercise,
aerobic dance and body works
work out.
The MSC Outdoor Recrea
tion Committee will hold a gen
eral meeting tonight at 7 in
Room 502 Rudder. A film about
white water rafting will be
shown.
A weekend canoe trip down
the San Marcos River and kayak
workshops in Cain pool are
some of the activies the Outdoor
Recreation Committee has plan
ned for the summer, Charlie
Walter, an MSC advisor, said.
He said between 10 and 15
people take the weekend trips.
The trips, which cost about $20,
mainly are for beginners and
give one-on-one instruction.
A Fourth of July rafting trip
is planned through Big Bend
National Park. It will cost $95
and last four or five days, he
said.
Two trips are planned for
August 13-19. One trip, which
will cost $235, is backpacking
through Rocky Mountain Na
tional Park and the other, which
will cost $ 180, is rafting and hik
ing through Yellowstone and
Grand Teton National Parks.
Walter said that the back
packing trip is recommended
for those with experience, but
beginners are welcome on the
rafting and hiking trip.
“We haven’t lost anyone yet,”
he said.
idence
officials
er rem
oneylirJ
, the soil
[ins mJ
|S School Board accepts
inove for Holik St. signals
VJy
By Angel Stokes
Battalion Staff
quencfiKThe College Station School
nrd met Monday night in a
Bcial meeting to discuss au-
girization of 11 additional per
sonnel for the 1983-84 school
9 r>
■ The board recommended
A Bt College Station Indepen
dent School District Superinten-
Bit H. R. Burnett be given au-
, Iferization to employ the same
a ' tl ' number of personnel for the
1982-83 school year and up to
11 instructional personnel for
l’s” isahB
the 1983-84 school year.
Other items on the agenda
were pedestrian signals for
Holik Street and awarding the
bid for the A&M Consolidated
Junior High paving project.
The City of College Station
recommended that automatical
ly time controlled and/or manu
ally operated signals and 20
mph speed limit signs be instal
led on Holik Street for the safety
of students.
The estimated cost of this
project is between $3,500 and
$4,000 with the school district
not to pay more than half of the
total cost.
The board accepted the re
commendation with an amend
ment to discuss the future aban
donment of Holik Street by the
city so the school district could
take over.
The paving project was
awarded to Diamond Energy for
the amount of $47,540.74.
Diamond Energy was the second
lowest bidder, but because of an
error in tabulation the first
lowest bidder, Benbow-Coen,
withdrew their bid.
staff photo by Brenda Davidson
College of Medicine Commencement
Dr. Raymond D. Pruitt, Dean Emeritus of the exercisers were Saturday afternoon in Rudder
Mayo Medical School in Rochester, Minn., Theatre. Dr. Pruitt holds several honorary
delivered the commencement address for the degrees, is the author of over 100 publications,
College of Medicine. The commencement and is a member of many honorary societies.
hraeiit,
as latclifl
a centeJ
admina
gn issue I
rtion. I
; plosive!]
m Excel]
length)]
Killed in shootout with protester
Sheriff eulogized in
United Press International
ALNUT RIDGE, Ark. —
aol jsysttBe Arkansas sheriff killed in a
iction,! sh( otout with anti-government
ind the)ir otester Gordon Kahl was
iced hi Moghed as an officer willing to
ortwasB 6 < l an g er even though he
, knew it could someday mean his
1(1 “lath.
11 .hB f avvrente County Sheriff
^'(IpBne Matthews, 36, was leading
]uickl)i®group of officers into an
underground bunker to arrest
the vaAhl when he was killed by a
mbythcB e bullet. At the same mo-
oduce ilB nt > Matthews fired at Kahl
and is believed to have killed
him, authorities said.
n Pf H “He was the man who was
11 " first to volunteer, first to take
uWfmmand and not afraid to pay
er baifiie price that he paid,” Arkansas
lonsli. State Trooper Mike Coy of
lie iteniiBnesboro, Ark., told an over-
ommi How crowd at Matthews’ funeral
ttacked Suilda y-
ion. I
say •
jSLiffhtmnsr
' Juts, kills
teenager
loned hgr
i o TVittB United Press International
lie u F'l BAYOU BENOIT, La. — A
isheii southern Louisiana teenager
was killed and another man was
[ late-t 1 injured by a bolt of lightning
ran lik* that struck their boat, author-
I their ’|es said.
an( j [)]■ Russell Savoie, 16, of St. Mar-
educate
About 250 officers with black
tape across their badges were
among the crowd of 700 people
who packed the First United
Methodist Church and stood
outside in the humid afternoon
to pay their last respects.
State Medical Examiner Dr.
Fahmy Malak expected to con
firm with dental records Mon
day that the charred body re
moved from the bunker after
the shootout Friday night was
Kahl’s. He said earlier he is
“quite certain” the man is Kahl.
Kahl, 63, died of a gunshot
wound just above his right ear,
and Malak said the bullet came
from a .44-caliber Magnum
handgun — the type carried by
Matthews.
Matthews was hit twice, Malak
said. A blast from a shotgun was
stopped by his bulletproof vest,
but the rifle bullet tore through
his left arm and into his chest
just an inch from the vest, he
said.
Officers outside opened fire
as soon as they heard shooting
inside the bunker. Reports have
differed on whether Matthews
ran from the house under his
own power or had to be dragged
to safety.
He died three hours later at a
hospital in Walnut Ridge, the
town where he had lived all his
life.
Kahl, a member of the para
military Posse Comitatus, was
being sought in the February
KlilllEllBlli
ut a
lie NEA
tinville, died Sunday
at
Lafayette hospital after being
struck by lightning at the Sandy
:a d e t0 T
^ythc c ove i anc ij n g Samuel Clausen,
35, also of St. Martinville, was
0WS"®iIisted in stable condition.
to use 1
hout
robletf
SUMMER FLASH
$ 1 Off
any Roll Processed and Printed
qaick as m flash
Good with Coupon Only (thru June 30)
POST OAK MALL 764-0601
Family Owned and Operated
irw: 1 Checks Accepted
visa Master Card
oeH
STAY IN SHAPE THIS SUMMER
Exercise All Summer (thru August 31) for ONLY $60
(or buy one single 6-week summer session for only $30)
At BODY DYNAMICS
College Station’s most
exciting exercise studio
Classes offered 7 days a week
Exercise often as you like,
whenever you like.
Call 696-7180 or stop by Body
Dynamics in the Post Oak Vil
lage on Harvey Road.
FF!
BODY DYNAMICS
heroic
slayings of two federal marshals
in North Dakota. A citizen who
apparently had seen Kahl’s pic
ture on an FBI wanted poster
reported Kahl was in northeast
Arkansas last week.
The couple who built the con
crete bunker in the side of a hill
— Leonard and Norma Ginter
— were arrested just before the
shootout and later charged with
capital murder in Matthews’
death. They also face federal
charges of harboring a fugitive.
“They’re just common, old
death
ordinary folks,” said Bill Wade,
who owns the property. “Man
alive, they’re the finest people in
the world.”
Wade said he and the Ginters
shared Kahl’s opposition to fed
eral income tax but were not
members of Posse Comitatus.
“Leonard was a good student
of the Bible,” Wade said.
Eight thousand rounds of
ammunition stored in the Gin
ters’ home exploded when
police tear gas burst into flames.
| 'Ptefiaie OCTOBER’83 |
MCAT
lllMKA Call Days Evenings & Weekends
We offer classes
in C.S. for June,
July & August
Call
696-3196
For details & schedule
Educational Center
TEST PREPARATION
SPECIALISTS SINCE 1938
707 Texas Ave. 301C
In Dallas:
11617 N. Central Expwy.
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