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About The Battalion. (College Station, Tex.) 1893-current | View Entire Issue (Sept. 16, 1983)
Page 14/The Battalion/Friday, September 16, 1983 Committee OKs prayer meetings after school United Press International WASHINGTON — The Senate Judiciary Committee approved a bill Thursday to permit public- elementary and high school stu dents to meet for prayer or Bible study in classrooms outside school hours. The panel endorsed, 11-4, a proposal by Sen. Jeremiah De nton, B-Ala., requiring schools to give students who want to meet before or after school for religious purposes the same chance to use classroom space as other clubs. “The meeting can be Jewish students, Moslem students, stu dents of any denomination,” De nton said. “The point is they must be granted equal access.” The measure is one of several The American Civil Liberties proposed to relax the prohibition on school prayer established by 1962 and 1963 Supreme Court rul ings. - . There is no federal law or Sup reme Court ruling barring stu dents from holding religious meetings on public school grounds. Union testified against the mea sure on First Amendment grounds in April, calling it a subtle way to reimpose religion on others. Technology’s Leading Edge Be a science or engineering of ficer in the Air Force. If you have a science or engineering degree, maybe you can qualify to join our dynamic team. See an Air Force recruiter today. Paul W. Broadus (409) 846-5521 (409) 846-6790 ^22 0 A great way ot lite. * ^.SCHULMAN OFF ADULT TICKET I 1st SHOW SAT. & SUN. * [** WJtWH THEATRES SCHULMAN 6 1775-2463 1775-2468 2002 E. 29th * c c u Welcome Back Aggies! Jf- For the 6th straight year Schulman Theatres is offering a $1 dis-^" count to all Aggies with a current year I.D. Offer is good now and until Sept. 30 at Schulman 6 & Manor East 3 Theatres. & T Fri. 7:15 9:45 Sat./Sun 2:30 4:50 7:15 9:45 ^ ('arol fuels a rising executive. Jack just tost his job. -k if .lack’s going to have to start from the lK»t tom up. * EA$y MONEY Fri. 7:30 9:55 Sat./Sun. 2:35 5:00 7:30 9:55 OAN AYKROYD EDDIE MURPHY They’re not just getting rich... They’re getting even. TI*TVI>IIVC} [Rj' Some very funny business. JVar Games ORSOF1 PICTURES RElk Fri. 7:25 9:40 Sal./Sun. 2:40 5:00 7:25 9:40 4* Journey to an age t OF AWESOME MAGIC + Deathslalker I THE LAST GREAT { WARRIOR KING. ^ + IRI. * Fri. 7:25 9:40 Sal./Sun. 2:45 5:05 7:25 9:40 * * * * * Jf 4 PPOl^ □□iDQUOYSTEBEr ^ IXrtjrJ^Jr IN SELECTED THEATRE 4- + 4- 4 4 2:40 5:00 7:25 9:40 Fri. 7:10 9:35 Sat./Sun. 2:40 4:55 7:10 9:35 ; FLASH DANCEir) MANOR EAST III Manor East Mall 623-8300 BOARDING SCHOOL 'Fri. 7:20 9:55 Sat/Sun 2:00 4:40 7:20 9:55 RETURN OF THE JEDI Fri. 7:25 9:45 Sat./Sun. 2:35 4:55 7:25 9:45 THE MAN FROM SNOWY RIVER Fri MIDNIGHT Sat. ANIMAL HOUSE I SKYWAY TWIN 7 PALACE L2000 E. 29th 822-3300 :822-5811 ms S Main e a bloodtide A NOSOTROS LOS S NIGHTMARE PALADOS E HEARTBREAK LA MAFIA DE S T IMPULSE LAFRONTERA ^ -k * -k -k -k -k + l-k '-k ★ -k -k ■k -k -k ■-k ■k •k -k -k * * -k ★ ,-k ★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★ Haitian officials deny AIDS link United Press International BOSTON — Haitian officials say their nation is being unfairly linked to AIDS, discouraging tourists and investors, but Amer ican health officials say Haitians compose a large number of high- risk cases. “Haiti has sufficient problems without being selected as a scape goat for a mysterious ailment that has, sadly, descended largely upon the American homosexual community,” Fritz Cineas, Haiti’s ambassador to the United States, wrote in the New England Journal of Medicine. “We, as a black nation, well understand the pains of world dis crimination, he said, adding he trusted the United States would be “careful to ensure that its medic-ill conclusions are based on objective, thoroughly researched conclusions and not on biased con jecture.” “The volume of media stories relating Haitians and AIDS has cast a pall of gloom over the coun try, deterring potential business investors and tourists from ven turing too near,” he said. But a spokesman for the Cen ters for Disease Control in Atlan ta, which conducts surveillance reports on acquired immune defi ciency syndrome, said Haitians are rightly classified as one of the four risk groups. “It is unfortunate but we have evidence that Haitians may be at a higher risk than other groups,” said CDC spokesman Chuck Fallis. Exactly 5.1 percent of the more than 2,200 AIDS cases in the Un ited States were among Haitians, Fallis said. Most cases of AIDS — which strips the body of its immunity system and leaves victims open to a host of opportunistic infections — have been reported in homose xual men. Drug abusers and hemophiliacs comprise the other risk groups. Fallis said Haiti — a nation with a population of 6 million — is second behind the United States in reported AIDS cases with 36 — 20 of them fatal. Ice cream and diet Coke? staff photo by JokMil Battal Hr- Texas Af jet their first n rom explosive j ekend. When the I lians come to ti ype of offense ace could bring he Emory Bell Bellard, the. rom 1971 to in vas the inven wpular wisldx: he die-hards u X-ople who eai ively. And aeeorc itate coach La tbone” will retu the Indians arsenal that rel may potential o ble option. That means I lary should he the game at ey fishbone is aln an-oriented a means the big b the line of serin The Indian oi hO, 180-pouml ■k Tim Lai irored four tone; Arkansas State's Marissa Arredondo gets more ice cream piled onto her banana split at the Banana Split sale sponsored by Omega Phi Al[ Arredondo, from Edinburgh, a junior majoring in accounting. THE BEST FOOD. THE LOWEST PRICES. Department of Food Services Texas A&M University Pearl Harbor search starts, ships probed "Quality First" United Press Internationa] PEARL HARBOR, Hawaii — National Park Service and Navy SCRIPTURE CRAVEN, Inc. Christian Supply On Texas Ave. South (Across from Ft. Shiloh) in College Station 696-7434 Come in and kzafi the. newest AouncU, in ouk Listening Ce.nte.si! divers found a gaping hole in the forward section of the sunken USS Arizona during a survey of the bat tleship. The hole was ripped open by 1 million pounds of explosives set off by a bomb when the Japanese attacked Pearl Harbor Dec. 7, 1941. Nearly 1,200 Marines and sailors aboard the ship died in the attack. About 1,100 remain en tombed in the wreckage. Cummins said it may difficult to confirm survivors ports the ship was hit by torp since any torpedo holes nisi buried deep under silt, .M S C. yApoiE QINEMA^ presents Burt Reynolds & Goldie Hawn “Best Friends” ONLY $1.00! Sponsored by Lowenbrau FRIDAY 7:30 & 9:45 p.m. RUDDER THEATRE SATURDAY MIDNIGHT RUDDER THEATRE TRUFFAUT’S iti>400 ■BfoulQ SUNDAY 7:30 p.m. RUDDER THEATRE $1.50 with TAMU I.D. Advance tickets available at MSC Box Office Mon.-Fri. 8:30- 4:30. Also 45 minutes before showtime. Casa Chapultepec Aggie Try Our! NOON SPECIALS BREAKFAST SPECIAL AGGIE SPECIAL Hours: Mon.-Fri. 10-2 5-9 Sat. 7 a.m. to 9 p.m.—Sun. 7 a.m.-2 p.m. OPEN LATE GAME NIGHT 1315 S. College 775-6052 $299 $245 $475 “It blew this big piece of de cking out and just laid it out over the side,” diver Gary Cummins, USS Arizona Memorial superin tendent, said Wednesday at the start of a week-long survey. The survey is the first extensive probe of the wreckage since the warship sank eight minutes after being bombed 42 years ago. “There is a tremendoussll dup,” Cummins said. “Until can go along this (left) sided ship literally foot by footandl find holes, we won t know. The survey team is videotaping the wreckage producing sketches with hopi creating a three-diraeni model of how the Arizonaap|) at the bottom of the harbor The divers will try to determine what can be done to preserve the battleship, try to locate any parts of the ship that may have scattered when the Arizona was sunk and will attempt to identify bomb and torpedo damage. In addition, the team find a clear area in the hark place remains of the ship’sIti The ship’s superstructure is; rently stored on land bub mins said the Navy would U place it in the harbor next It memorial. Cummins said before lk ject began that no diver wills the ship out of considerate the men entombed in the'! and for the safety of the dhl SW UT United Press The Texas ranked No. 3 in have yet to play 11 this year. The Auburn edNo. 4 and h< throughout the team that will s and perhaps e before the seas< And just al Saturday those meet as part ol early-season dot will weed out th [powerful Nebra idub in the land The second league twin bill which will he tc jority of the cot No. 6 Ohio Sta; Oklahoma in Nc If Oklahon ild win tin Saturday, it woi Oct. 8 collisioi something even rily is, \ enough. The Longho ill quite possil i * 1 SAT/SUN DISC 1st 30 MINS 1st SHOW FRI STUDENT DISC WITH ID TrtrniTlt I i v l JMTTTl 1500 , ° 1 " 1 WEEKNITES: 7:35-9:50 SAT/SUN: 2:15-4:45-7:30-9:55 The 60 second war begins NOW! 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