out thousand s on election i King was fair. ous were rep est for Mara ar-old regim i political and following tire ling of oppoi no Aquino. .aurel, pres® Nationalist III li/ation, a lion group,si ■ strong sb g to Marcos. vote of prc ntment, a v« urel said, ai n would usei ■nee in Part | 1 the bodv*i her stai You're joking lamp. Melanie Weinmann and Gene Roberts, both sophomore journalism majors from Hous ton, helped sophomore zoology major Mar garet Abadie pack her car last Friday. Aba- die was moving out of Krueger Hall and heading for her hometown of Houston. d in an inttil ■levision neaj iciety Mu j it least 13dl nting was fill isition wouldl Pushing new tax, education plans White takes pleas to committees United Press International r of the kei 'acific Ocear le would btl ied man iiBAUSTIN — C>ov. Mark rivals wontt 1 ^ took his tax hike propo sals and educational reform ging hispaitiBins to House and Senate coin- ii rural areas®tlees Tuesday, making a per- darcos blamf sona l plea for action in a special media. legislative session to “give edu- are sendingp 1 ' 011 the priority it deserves.” le effect iJTeachers. school administra- rtainlv sua# 0rs 'education groups and state me or thepacked the House id this ha 1 fhamber as members of the nine montlis,K'^ alure ’ s education commit- jino slayiti? r cs took their First collective omic crisis, §9°^ a t proposals to raise taxes and reform public education. I While White has not yet offt- Itlly ordered the Legislature mo a special session, he contin- lied to steadfastly maintain that lawmakers would best deal with News. the educational reform issue in a summer meeting rather than waiting until the next regular session convenes in January. “A special session offers the best opportunity to give educa tion the priority it deserves,” White testified at the joint com mittee hearing. Some legislators apparently disagreed, however. Sen. John Montford, D-Lub- bock, pressured budget officials for a firm figure on how much a special session would cost the state. “I want some straight poop on how much this all will cost,” Montford said, pointing out that no tax hike had been ap proved in a special session since 1969. The legislative committees, which will meet again Wednes day, were considering a draft hill by House committee chair man Bill Haley, D-Center, that incorporated many of the edu cational reform proposals rec ommended by H. Ross Perot’s special education committee. Haley’s preliminary hill, how ever, ignored several of the Perot committee’s key recom mendations, including a contro versial proposal to abolish the 27-member elected State Board of Education and replace it with a nine-member body appointed by the governor. Perot’s committee incorpo rated all its recommendations into its own 175-page draft bill and presented it to the legis lative committees Tuesday. White has made separate proposals for educational re form — including his endorse ment of an appointed State Board of Education — and for a $4.8 billion, four-year tax hike but has not yet drafted any bills. Harris Hill, president of the Texas Association of School Boards, testified his group op posed the proposal for an ap pointed state board, which he said would have “no constitu ency, even less visibility and, therefore, less accountability.” Several teachers appealed to committee members Tuesday for higher salaries, with one tea cher complaining that princi pals unfairly received higher pay than teachers. Wednesday, May 16,1984/The Battalion/Page 5 High court OKs sign removal United Press International WASHINGTON — A city trying to improve its appear ance can tear down signs posted on public properly without vio lating free speech rights, the Supreme Court ruled Tuesday. The 6-3 decision reinstated a Los Angeles sign-posting ban enacted as part of the city’s beautification program, A city council candidate challenged the ban, arguing that barring temporary political signs from public property violated his constitutional right of free speech. A federal appeals court agreed, saying the First Amend ment guarantees of free speech outweigh any governmental in terest in an uncluttered urban landscape. Reversing that ruling Tues day, the Supreme Court, for the second time in recent years, gave cities freedom to clean up visual blight. In 1980, the jus tices allowed San Diego to re strict commercial use of bill boards to “preserve and improve the appearance of the city.” In other action Tuesday, the court ruled 6-2 in a Wisconsin drunken driving case that po lice cannot enter a home with out a warrant to arrest a person for a “civil, non-jailable traffic offense.” The justices also unani mously ruled that hydroelectric project licenses must follow In terior Department rules per taining to Indian reservations only when the projects are in side a reservation’s boundary. Projects that may affect reserva tions hut are not actually on res ervation land need not follow department recommendations, the court said. In the Los Angeles sign-post ing case, Justice John Paul Ste vens wrote for the majority that a city may reasonably attempt to upgrade its appearance by rid ding itself of an accumulation of signs posted outside. “We accept the city’s position that it may decide that the es thetic interest in avoiding ‘visual clutter’ justifies a removal of signs creating or increasing that clutter,” he said. Stevens said a “state may sometimes curtail speech when necessary to advance a signifi cant and legitimate state inter est.” Preventing visual clutter, promoting traffic safety and protecting workmen who scale utility poles — all reasons ad vanced by the Los Angeles City Council for barring signs — are such valid interests, Stevens said. The ordinance “does not af fect any individual’s freedom to exercise the right to speak and to distribute literature in the same place where the posting of signs on public properrty is pro hibited,” Stevens declared. But Justice William Brennan, writing in dissent, said the ban “sweeps so broadly and trenches so completely on ... use of an important medium of po litical expression that it must he struck down as violative of the First Amendment.” <0 a o cc 3 < a> <-* a> ■a. E o Ken’s Automotive 421 S. Main — Bryan 822-2823 "A Complete Automotive Service Center" Tune-Ups . . Clutches * Brakes Front End Parts Replacement Standard Transmission Repairs GM Computer Testing All American Cars Datsun-Honcfa T oyota 10% Discount with Student i.D. on parts (Master Card & VISA Accaptecj OPEN I SATURDAYS, “(You should) abolish the sweat shop practice of reward ing one man for getting more work from the workers,” said teacher Peggy Bonds of Cilmer. “When you start setting educa tion policies, talk to the teach ers. We make sense, but we also need to make dollars.” A vocational education stu dent from Madisonville testified against proposals to cut funding for vocational programs, claim ing the work programs bol stered academics. “What kind of leaders do you want for your children or your grandchildren?” said Cary An drews, a senior. “Do you want an educated, experienced leader or do you want an inex perienced hookworm?” NOTICE New Summer Rates Eff. Start at $150 1 Bedroom Start at $175 2 Bedroom Start at $210 Additional Discount on 12 month Lease SUMMER SHUTTLE BUS liliilouiick apartments 430 SW Parkway 693-1325 'harming grey-haired Dallas lady is the editor of '101 Aggie Jokes' United Press International DALLAS — A terrible secret is concealed by a charming grey-haired lady who lives in a iieat-as-a-pin brick house on a tree-shaded street in north Dal- | She is the editor of the Aggie joke book. In fact, income from 10 editions of 101 Aggie Jokes help this lady live in com fortable retirement. She is a founder and one of four owners of Cigem Press, which publishes the often [)rny, sometimes outrageous Jit always profitable series of Jke books both hated and loved at Texas A&M University. I All four Cigem Press owners jgsist that their identities be tepl secret, not through fear of reprisals from irate Aggies hut Imply because they feel they do pi have the time or resources lo handle the calls, letters and ■tie-consuming demands that iblicily would bring. More than 900,000 copies of e 10 editions have been sold, he books’ best marketplace is e Bryan-Coilege Station area, line of Texas A&M. Cigem ess is privately owned and es not disclose financial de lls. But when the editor was ked if it has been profitable she replied, “Oh Mercy, yes. We have no complaints on that score. Except we think that we have been a little foolish on the price,” The price is a hit of a sore point. In 1965 the first edition was sold for 98 cents. Ten edi tions later the 1983 edition sold for $1.50, which the owners now feel is too low. They have spotted a similar joke book about North Carolina State — which certainly does not have the peculiar tradition of Texas A&M — that carries a price of $3.98. It seems a cinch that when the 11th edition goes to press in the fall of 1985 it will carry a higher price. Nobody claims the jokes are especially witty, or in good taste. (“Do you know why Aggies carry cow chips in their back pockets? For identification.”) “No racial, religious, homo sexual or excessively dirty jokes are used,” a Cigem Press news release says, “but many raunchy ones are, if they are funny enough.” (“Then there was the Aggie who had VD of the eyes. He looked for love in all the wrong places.”) Despite the fact that they are edited by a sweet little lady and the corporation is run by a rather upright group of own ers, the hooks probably are not items you would show to your Sunday School teacher — even though at least one of the own ers has taught Sunday School. The hook’s owners do not make up the jokes. Each edition of “101 Aggie Jokes” asks read ers to “Share your Aggie jokes.” Share them they do. “Lord have mercy,” ex claimed the editor. “Aggies, their relatives, kids who plan to go to A&M, they all send us jokes.” The jokes come from all over Texas, throughout the United States and from foreign out posts. About 1,000 jokes come in for each edition, often in en velopes bearing postmarks from spots in Saudi Arabia, South Africa and Malaysia. The idea for an Aggie joke- book was voiced in Amarillo in 1965 when three members of the Dallas Advertising League were attending a convention. Dozens of Aggie jokes were be ing told in the convention’s hos pitality suites. The editor recalls she told the other two advertis ers, “Somebody could make some money if they collected the jokes and put them in a hook.” When they returned to Dallas discussions about a book be came serious. In November 1965 the first book was re leased. The first printing of 10,000 copies sold out in two days. A new book has been issued in every odd-numbered year ever since. In 1968, at the re quest of an A&M regent, an as sistant state attorney general visited Cigem Press to request that publication cease, the founders say. A Baylor grad uate, the state official admitted he personally liked the jokes and ended up apologizing for his mission. The Texas A&M Library or ders three copies of each edi tion. In 1976 editors of the Texas A&M 100th anniversary yearbook received permission to reprint a two-page spread of the best Aggie jokes and car toons from the Cigem Press books. In 1982 Cigem Press was in corporated. One of the three founders moved away from Texas and his share was pur chased by two other Dallas resi dents. “I always think these jokes are a form of envy,” said the prim and proper editor. “They are the only ammunition against the bragging Aggie. We think Aggies don’t mind the jokes because they know they’re better than anyone else.” Professional service you’ve come to expect. You can depend on the qualified professionals at ^ TSO to provide you with quality eyewear, expertly selected and professionally fitted for the clearest, most comfortable vision possible. And, as always, at a price you can afford. i€j& US Texas State Optical: 214 N Main Bryan 779-2786 Post Oak Mall College Station 764-0010 = Complete Auto Repair