Attention Aggieland Staff Members The first staff meeting will be Monday September 5 in the Aggieland office at 7 p.m. Staff members are also urged to call the Aggieland office as soon as possible to inform us of any new phone numbers. Aggieland office 845-2681, 845-2682 Rioters moved to other prisons while authorities regain control Today Ht mms STAND // io m United Press International HOMINY, Okla. — Author ities Tuesday transported the last of nearly 750 inmates from a fire-gutted prison, ending a riot that left one prisoner dead and 23 inmates and officers injured. A Corrections Department spokeswoman in Oklahoma City said the prisoners, who had bat tled guards and burned build ings since Monday night, were fed, loaded into buses and taken to other facilities. PI KAPPA ALPHA FALL RUSH THE BROTHERS OF WISH TO ANNOUNCE SEPT. 1 SEPT. 6 SEPT. 8 ALL PARTIES AT THE PIKE HOUSE 301 BITTLE IN BRYAN. For more information James or Mike 764-7659 Steve 764-1996 WYATTS CAFE If Department spokeswoman Joyce Jackson said officers had regained control of the Conner Correctional Center, all fires were out, food was taken in and the prison was evacuated. She said the inmates were being taken to other state prisons and none would be housed in county jails. The center, about 40 miles northwest of Tulsa, was de signed for 400 inmates. Authorities identified the man slain in the rioting as Greg Hodges, 27, who was serving a 12-year sentence from McCur- tain County for second-degree murder. Corrections Department Di rector Larry Meachum said an autopsy would be required to determine the cause of death, but Dennis James, a hospital administrator in Hominy, said Hodges suffered gunshot wounds to the chest. All of the inmates were rounded up by 4 a.m. CDT, offi cials said. Meachum had said an hour earlier that 130 inmates still were not cooperating. Shortly after midnight a spokesman for Gov. George Nigh said only 200 inmates were under control and another 500 were believed to be loose within the medium- security facility. John Reid, the governor’s news secretary, said the facility housed 748 inmates and the en tire prison was involved in rioting. Officials said 20 inmates three guards were injured Nigh declared a state emergency and summoned members of the NationalCt from BartlesvilleandPonal and at least 120 HighwayPj troopers to help quell the L- and regain control of thepnl Authorities said some -\A Jjj'pt inmates were armed with and makeshift weapons afete from the prison cafeteria,| OOPS. buildings were set on fire, T never expected this’ Torn t-shirt now a trend United Press International SLOB CHIC: Beverly Hills designer Michael Kaplan, who made the slob look chic in “Flashdance,” is amazed at the way it has caught on. “I never expected this,” he said of the torn T-shirt and slashed sweat shirt look he popularized in the movie. He said the floppy look was done for practical, not tren dy, reasons. Jennifer Beals, star of the movie, is built nothing like Marine Jahan, the dancer who doubled for her. The loose- fitting clothes served to camouf lage their bodies, making it easier to interchange shots of the two. “I don’t think I really even created the look,” he said. “I think maybe I validated some thing that already existed on a small scale and now it’s more widespread.” Kaplan, 33, said it also helped that Beals “has such beautiful shoulders.” MARTINA’S SLAM: Marti na Navratilova has something more on her mind than winning this week’s U.S. Open — she is being sued for $2 million by photographer Art Seitz. Seitz claims that he was covering the match last Sept. 7, when Navra tilova was upset about losing in the quarter finals to Pam Shriv el', and “viciously attacked and physically assaulted him, caus ing bodily injury.” Seitz is being represented by Marvin Mitch- elson through his New York associates, Clair & Daniele. Mitchelson, an alimony- palimony lawyer who prides himself on defending women’s rights, said, “This is a woman’s wrong.” Seitz also is suing the Garrison Security Corp., the Open’s security force. GROWING UP: Carol Bur nett stars with Elizabeth Taylor in the HBO film “Between Friends,” of which she said, “It shows there is life after meno pause.” The plot deals frankly with sex because of changing au dience attitudes. “A few years ago," sht Ms. magazine, “Jack walked off his show NBC', deleted the term; closet’ and now peopleevi ‘toilets’; they even show on television screens, fit then, nobody ever went u bathroom on television.! growing up. I don’t thinkci| Up.” Ms. Burnett also isgra up — past her 50th birth “1 feel terrific," she said ty was a bummer. But i being 50.” She isn’t afraid periment because, “Succh| ■ United Pi |learly 70 de in A (0|. whipped cream” and “liiS>ed on learned anything from s p teleph anyway “1 helped School district ordered to reorganize its debts ick on th< mtor assi )in orders llation. Negotiati isUngeles nkes coi buntain Be lone. In Los Ar the Inte of Elec United Press International create the CAMPUS SAN JOSE, Calif. — The 32,000-student San Jose school district — one of the largest in California and the first in state history to go bankrupt — was under court order Tuesday to nullify its contracts with em ployee unions and roll back wages to 1981-82 levels. U.S. Bankruptcy Judge Seymour Abrahams, citing “the imminent collapse of this whole school system,” ruled at the end of a five-day trial Monday that the San Jose Unified School Dis trict could not meet'its bills and must reorganize its debts. Lawyers for the San Jose Teachers Association and the California School Empb Organization — twounioiK resenting 77 percentoftk trict’s 2,800 teachers and« em ployees — argued durioj trial that the district mismanaged and was uni singling out employees b cuts. ha in the state!" GAY STUDENT SERVICES MEETING TONIGHT We offer a roommate locator service, speakers bureau, medical and counseling referrals, and general community information. We meet on the second and last Wednesday of every month at 7:30 p.m. FOR MORE INFORMATION, CALL 846-2106 District filed for bankruptt June 30 under ChapterDoi U.S. Bankruptcy Code,: tending it was $1.7 mid debt from last year andfi another $6 million in deb year. The district is the largest in the state, whid 1,042 school districts. a The average teacher district earns $29,000, a lose about $ 1,500duetotbt—. back, school officials estini! 1 ) to 1S Lillian Barna, district <« ^ rew intendent, said she was gut by the ruling. “It means we will beat: open the schools forthebt ning of classes next week said. “Without it (theded tion) it would f been impossible to open.' ax United I ALLAS cab c d the d road Co occlusive taxi cal ne firm’ ellow C; the on ise froi the I e Monday mission gover and ap ice fron lies, Ten Dallas. LIKE TO PUT THIS ON YOUR RESUME? YOU CAN. COME TO MSC VIDEO’S FIRST MEETING OF THE SEMESTER FOR MORE INFO TUESDAY, SEPT. 6, 7'-OOpm RM 350 MSC THE CONVENIENCE O 24-HOUR BANKING A LOCATION A SHO WALK AWAY. WECANHELI K R^gisti 711 University DrW College Station.Te# 5 846-8fr use y< DIANO h fOR