r Register Now! for Breakdance C&W Jazz Tap Ballet Page 6/The Battalion/Tuesday, June 12, 1984 Children • Teens • Adults Breakdance classes instructed by Sam Bennett of “The Zappers” Call for more information 693-0352 The Gallery of Dance Arts 107 Dowling, College Station J 0$*- \P G* N A G L £ 4 0 2 NEWPORT offers apart ment condominiums for lease this summer and fall. Two and three bedroom floor plans available. Com pletely furnished, includes washer and dryer, covered parking, 24-Hr. Emergency maintenance and security access. 402 Nagle College Station 846-8960 m MCTRO PROPf RTIES MANAGEMENT INC CONDOMINIUMS • ... CRIPPLE CREEK Condo miniums have a limited number of one bedroom and one bedroom/studios avail able for lease. Enjoy a pool, hot tub, tennis courts,w/d conn., ventilated shelving, large walk-in closets and right on the shuttle bus route. One bedrooms from $345. 904 Univ. Oaks #56 College Station 764-0504 m METRO PROPERTIES MANAGEMENT INC is having a SUPER SUMMER SALE FQPPIT 1 /O OFF III I I / (selected groups) MIPHFI 1/9 OFF lvllV^ , l ILhLb 1/te (selectedgroups) MEN S SHIRTS $ 12 9 V14 99 Perfect for Fathers Day SALE LASTS ALL WEEK LONG Post Oak Mall 764-9009 SPECIAL NOTICE 1st SUMMER SESSION OPTIONAL BOARD PLAN Stunclents, on campus, off campus, and graduate, may dine on meal plan during the 1st Summer Session at TAMU. Students selecting the 7-day plan may dine three meals each day, except Sunday evening: Those se lecting the 5-day plan may dine each day, Monday through Friday. Meals will he served Commons. Fees are payable to the Controller of Accounts, Fiscal Office Coke Building. Notice dates: Commons will be open for cash business on Registration day, June 4. Meal plan will begin on the first day of class, June 5. Fees for each plan are as follows: 7 Day $215.00 Juno 5 through July 3 and 5 day $188.00 July 5 and 11 Meal plan validation will begin at 7:30 a.in., June 5, in Commons Lobby. Fee slips will be required Elderly woman dies of poison United Press International SAVOY — State and county offi cials Monday investigated the death of an elderly woman served cleaning solvent instead of juice at a nursing home that relatives of another pa tient complained is chronically un derstaffed. At the order of Justice of the Peace Don Jones, investigators from the Fannin County sheriffs office, the district attorney’s office and the Texas Department of Health Mon day toured the 47-patient Savoy Nursing Home, located 60 miles north of Dallas, and questioned em ployees at the facility. Doric Emerson, 83, died Saturday afternoon at the Fannin County Hospital after being served two glasses of ChemCan, a red-colored cleaner apparently mistaken for cranberry juice, said hospital admin istrator Bill Johnson. Emma Zuver, 57, also drank two glasses of the cleaning fluid for din ner Friday. She was reported in sat isfactory condition Monday with sec ond-degree burns in her mouth and throat, officials at the Texoma Medi cal Center in Denison said. Five other women patients drank the cleaner, but did not require hos pitalization. All of those involved in the inci dent were total care patients who were unable to feed themselves, said Fannin County District Attorney Dan Meehan. The cleaner had only a slight odor and was the color and texture of red juice. One of the two investigators from the health department, which li censes the state’s 1,100 nursing homes, was a nurse who examined the five patients still at the home Monday and said they appeared to be in good condition. Meehan, who stressed that he was conducting an inquiry rather than a criminal investigation, said he had no indications of a criminal act in the incident. The solvent apparently was poured into a bottle that usually is used to serve cranberry juice to the residents. GOP campaigns against White United Press International AUSTIN — Gov. Mark White’s promise in 1982 that he would not raise taxes if elected governor will be splashed on billboards to remind voters of his broken campaign promises, the chairman of the Texas Republican Party said Monday. George Strake of Houston said the billboard campaign is part of a “political educational effort” that will be mounted statewide to focus on the failures of White’s adminis tration. Strake announced the campaign at a news conference held beneath a billboard near the state Gapitol, which quoted White as saying: “... there will be no new taxes for Tex ans when I am governor.” White made the statement in an Oct. 10, 1982, interview with the Fort Worth Star-Telegram while he was running for governor, Strake said. White, a Democrat, is proposing in the current special session of the Texas Legislature a three-year, $4.8 billion tax increase for education and highways. It would be the larg est tax increase in the state’s history and the first since 1971. “This is the beginning of a cam paign to point out some of the bro ken promises of Gov. White,” Strake said. “We are hoping this will spur the taxpayers to put their hand over their wallet, take a look toward Aus tin and make sure these people are not going to spend them into obliv ion.” Strake said Republicans are not opposed to education reforms, but he said the Legislature should first look for additional funds through cuts in the current budget. “What we think can be done is to look for ways to save money in the current budget,” he said. “We think teachers can have their pay raise. Maybe not 24 percent, but certainly a substantial pay raise.” Strake said the GOP had pre viously identified some $500 million in fat that could be trimmed from the state’s two-year, $32 billion bud get. White has said he would not ob ject to the current budget being re viewed, but he contends there is not enough time in the special session to go through the entire budget. The session ends July 3. Strake said the Republican Party is not ruling out the possibility that new taxes will be needed, but he said budget cuts should be the first prior- ity. Around town Softball registration ends Wednesday Order deadline for grads is Wednesday Bryan Public Library presents “Xanadu” Three design students win competition Three graduate students in the Gollege of Architecture and En vironmental Design at Texas A&M University have won awards in I the central region 1984 National Student Design Competition spon sored by the Institute of Business Designers. Barry Maners of Pasadena won first prize, which includes $50{i and a certificate of merit. Matthew Mooney of Pittsburgh, Pa., won I $250 and a certificate of merit for second prize in the competition, and Bruce Nacke of Dallas received a certificate of merit for second | honorable mention. Maners and Mooney, who both received their master’s degrees in I architecture with an emphasis in interior architecture in May, have advanced to the final stage of the competition where their designs will be judged against the designs of the top two winners from list East and West divisions. A&M boasts three Fu(bright scholars Two business professors and an administrator at Texas AB! University have received Fulbright Scholarships to study in Europe Dr. John J. Kanet, associate professor of business analysis and re search in the College of Business Administration recently leflfonl one year visit to West Germany. He will serve as professor and as nior research fellow at the Universitat Erlangen in Nuremberg. Dr. Debby Schellenberg, assistant professor of managemenl,was I awarded a Fulbright Scholarship at INSEAD in Fontainebleau, France. She will teach and study during the fall and spring.Mona I Rizk-Finne, coordinator for Texas A&M’s Study Abroad Office,has | completed a trip to Germany visiting Bonn, Stuttgart, Konstanz, Freiburg, Tubingen, Hohenheim and Berlin, where she met with government and university officials. City distributes free cheese and butter Free processed cheese and butter will be distributed to certified participants today from 3:00 p.m. to 6:30 p.m. at Lincoln Centerin College Station. If you are not certified and would like to be, you an do so at the same time at Lincoln center. If you are getting certified today you will not receive cheese or butter until next month. Woman says she was go-between Baby smuggling testimony heard United Press International LAREDO — A woman testified Monday she was a go-between in a ring that located destitute pregnant women in Mexico and arranged to smuggle their babies into the United States for adoption by couples who paid up to $2,000. San Juana Martinez Lopez, an un married mother of seven, told U.S. District Judge George Kazen she acted on instructions from Nelda Colwell, 39, of Layton, Utah, in ar ranging for a second woman to transport the Mexican babies across the Rio Grande from neighboring Nuevo Laredo, Mexico. She said she also arranged for a third woman, a midwife, to falsify documents showing the babies were born in Laredo. Colwell pleaded innocent to three counts of a federal grand jury indict ment in the alleged baby-smuggling scheme and asked for a non-jury trial that began Monday. Martinez and two other Laredo women pleaded guilty in Kazen’s court last month and agreed to tes tify for the government. Prosecutor David Almaraz said in his opening statement he would show that Colwell at first legally adopted newborn children in Mex ico, but became “obsessed” with plac ing children in homes of “baby- starved parents” and about a year ago, began looking for shortcuts to get the infants across the border. Almaraz said at least five Mexican babies were smuggled into Laredo and that midwife Juanita Melendez Calderon, who also pleaded guilty, falsely registered them as being born in Texas. The Mexican mothers then went to Laredo attorney Sharon Trigo, who is helping Utah attorney George Handy defend Colwell, and signed relinquishment papers and began adoption procedures. Martinez testified the adoptive parents paid all the fees. She said she received $100 to $200 for helping locate the babies and asking the impoverished moth- • desperal ers if they wanted to give them for adoption. Handy said his client had noinc cation that the babies were brouj into the country illegally and only trying to operate a non-] service to obtain babies for parents in Utah. “This is a story of people wholod children and want children buitat| have children,” Handy said in opening argument. “They new profited in any way except to people happiness.” However, one of the Mail mothers who signed papers quishing her infant son last Mai has changed her mind and now she wants the baby back. relit Five Ohio family members die in car collision United Press International SAVOY — Five members of an Ohio family making a new life in Texas died with the 2-year-old son of a friend in a head-on collision caused by an ex-convict and drug addict who was driving drunk, a highway trooper said Monday. Authorities said the Sunday eve ning accident virtually wiped out the Crunkilton family of the Bellview, Ohio, area, leaving only 18-year-old David, who had remained in Ohio to graduate from high school. David’s mother had died in February. Also killed was a 2-year-old boy whose mother heard about the acci dent on the radio, raced to the scene and became hysterical when she saw her son dead on the road, officers said. The accident happened on High way 82 between Savoy and Ector, 60 miles north of Dallas, at about 6:40 p.m. Sunday. Department of Public Safety trooper R.L. Dorrough said Jimmy Harrell Bilyeu, 29, of Savoy was driving with no license, no insurance and a cooler of beer in his van when he collided with a car driven by Harry Crunkilton of the Bellview, Ohio, area. Bilyeu is in serious condition to day at Texoma Medical Center in Denison, hospital officials said. “I can prove he was on the wrong side of the road,” the trooper said. “I’m wailing for blood and urine tests on the DWI. “I could smell (liquor). I talked to him,” said Dorrough, who said the accident would be referred to the Fannin County grand jury. Dorrough said Bilyeu has served prison terms for burglary, larceny, forgery, fraud, drugs and escaping from prison. The trooper said Bi- lyeu’s drug habit led to the amputa tion of both legs while he was in the Texas Department of Corrections. and they got infected,” Dom4 said. “They had to amputate.” Harry Crunkilton, 50, was W in the collision, along with hiss Daniel, 8; his fiancee, Hattie Rtf 50; her son Albert G. Reed, 11') daughter, Patricia Reed, 16, John Reynolds, 2. Dorrough said the CrunkM family had moved to the area aim six weeks ago and worked on at owned by Kenneth Breedlofl whose car they were driving. “He was giving himself shots be tween the toes so it wouldn’t be seen “They were going to the Reyn# house to take back the baby”aficij outing, he said. DOC DOC dhjc: DOC DOC DOC iW $ 34.00 Leather /J Lowest price in town always a]m Kaepas also available $38.95 HUMANA HOSPITAL Bryan-College Station Has an immediate opening for SPECIAL PROCEDURES TECHONOLOGIST (ARRT) 1402 Texas Ave. 693-8269 in the Radiology Department. Position is full time and does involve call. Would accept part time empolyment with flexible hours during daytime. Contact Personnel Office EOE 775-4200 M/F -VW" " ■ww MW- Bryan Recreation Division will hold registration for the Recre ation Softball Leagues through Wednesday. The cost is $200. For more information call the Bryan Recreation Division or visit the of fice at 203 E. 29th St. \ Seniors planning to graduate in August can order graduatie announcements in room 217 MSC from 8 a.m. to 4 p.m. todayandl tommorrow. This will be the last chance to place orders. The Bryan Public Library is presenting movies every Tuesday night until August 28. The movies will be shown in the library audi torium at no charge to the public. Tonight’s movie is “Xanadu,"star ring Olivia Newton-John, Gene Kelly, and Michael Beck. The she* begins at 6:30 p.m. EL I I cyclist across Paso, n Texas I “All ing a b Fairclo travelir torcych g°gg le Frisky. “It t; across songs a spaces Texas union ' trip I’rr Fairc living c more o l€ Lake AUS4 I private c Conserv summer Texas re j Monday Foun< [Bristol would b< [Sam Ray Lewisvill Brislo phase is 110,000 I Trades [Army C Texas P I lion alsc I cleanup. Mai WAS forests ronmen partly b poll u tar annual eluded 1 Scien showing stress” t — deter as 30 ye Precipit The alarmin that for st< U NEW sufferec month 1 indicate not a bo esl rates Rudo sional 1 fate pre Congre DOC DOC doc:—pH •Sp EA Doub