ADULT BOOKS & VIDEO CLUB 11a.m.-la.m. 11a.m.-2a.m. Mon.-Thur. Fri. & Sat. Fri. & Sat. 3828 S. College 846-7780 Page 6/The Battalion/Tuesday, July 17, 1984 RESTAURANT ivew chef: 30 years experience in Hunan andL Szechuan cook. Try our NEW Family Style dinners - many selections at a low price. Also, enjoy NEW Complete dinners. Many Choices - Low Prices. Serving wine and beer 846-8345 Mon. - Sun. Mon. - Sat. 11 am - 2 pm 5 pm - 10 pm Closed Sunday Evenings 3805 TEXAS AV. - BRYAN SPECIAL NOTICE 2nd SUMMER SESSION OPTIONAL BOARD PLAN Students, on campus, off campus, and graduate, may dine on a meal plan during the 2nd Summer Session at TAMU. Students selecting the 7-day plan may dine three meals each day, except Sunday evening: Those selecting the 5-day plan may dine three meals each day, Monday through Friday. Meals will be served in 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, july 12. Meal plans will begin on the first day of class, July 13. 7 Day 5 day Fees for each plan are as follows: $215.00 $188.00 July 13 through August 17 The Apartment That Pays Its Own Way! •Spacious floorplans w/ large kitchen •Walk-in closets & outside storage •Jacuzzi, sauna, steam room & pool •Fireplace w/brick hearth •Washer/dryer, microwave •Security •No exterior maintenance •Tax advantage •Some units available for leas DoubleTVee CONDOMINIUMS 1901 W. Holleman Drive College Station, Texas 77840 693-3232 Free Shuttle Bus Pass With Purchase Vuarnet-France Sunglasses First Choice of Outdoorspeople Worldwide Whether you run, bicycle, sail, fish, backpack, play tennis,drive a car, skijclimb mountains,or just like to read in the bright summer sun, there is a Vuarnet-France Sunglass to fit your particular needs. Stop by soon f find out why Vuarnet-France Sunglasses are so well-liked. Pickup a free "Choosing Sunglasses"information sheet. Whole Earth PlonsA^nSompany 105 5oye.tt College Station 8^6-8794 — r nn- ■ Tourists killed in Baja United Press International CABO SAN LUCAS, Mexico — Three U.S. tourists and a New Zea lander were killed and a fourth American was injured when the car they were traveling in crashed head- on with a bus in Baja California, offi cials said Monday. The accident occurred Saturday on the highway between San Jose del Cabo and Cabo San Lucas, resorts at the extreme southern tip of the Baja California Peninsula, some 700 miles south of the U.S. border. The three American tourists killed were identified as Fred and Lily Broward of Venice, Calif., and Linda Price, 33, no hometown given, said a U.S. Embassy spokesman. Ronald Ferguson, of New Zea land, was also killed in the crash, while the fourth American, Cathe rine Michelle Avila, was injured and evacuated Sunday to Scripps Hospi tal in California, the spokesman said. A report in La Prensa newspaper said the driver of the taxi, Juan de Dios Ariste, 25, also died in the crash. The tourists were en route to Cabo San Lucas when the taxi crossed into the lane of oncoming traffic and crashed head-on into a bus. A truck then rammed the car from behind, said authorities in the peninsula. Covert actions ‘provoked Vietnam’ United Press International Shortly after taking over the pre sidency following the assassination of John F. Kennedy, Johnson or dered a program of covert opera tions drawn up to discourage North Vietnamese aggression. SHOE by Jeff MacNeli, The debate today focuses on U.S. activities in Central America — activ ities that U.S. News says are almost identical to those the United States was engaged in two decades ago in North Vietnam. ."•vN ^ J the city’s l 7 s forced sevt Alternative Cinema to show families to for the dur Strike-b sions, clini gery, and aside 2,00! transfers v> variety of movies this fall About 4, nursing ho in 28 iiospi WASHINGTON — Naval inci dents that led to direct U.S. military involvement in Vietnam may have been provoked by covert operations much like those the CIA is backing in Nicaragua, U.S. News 8c World Report said Sunday. In a top secret cable, the secretary of state suggested a North Vietnam ese attack on a U.S. warship was re lated to raids against North Vietnam by U.S.-paid mercenaries, the mag azine said. Its 12-page report, based on inter views and examination of recently declassified documents, also ques tions whether the so-called Gulf of Tonkin incident — a North Viet namese attack on two U.S. destroy ers — ever occurred. Responding to the attack on the destroyers, President Lyndon John son ordered air strikes against North Vietnam and Congress passed what became known as the Gulf of Ton kin Resolution. The resolution gave Johnson power to expand the war. Although rescinded in 1971, that resolution is at the center of the present-day de bate between Congress and the White House over war-making pow ers. By Dolores Hajovsky Reporter A variety of films important in the history of cinema will be shown this fall by a new club. The club will show movies that do more than just entertain, said Pro fessor Larry Hickman, originator of Alternative Cinema. Alternative Cinema is a special interest club that is concerned with more than new films and popular classics, Hickman said. Not all the scheduled films are old, Hickman said. The movies planned for the fall date from 1934 to 1974. The movies Hickman has arranged are not being shown in surrounding cinemas or have not been shown ai Texas A&M. “Films are important documents in the history :>f cinema,” Hickman said. “There are classics in literature like Shakespeare, and there are clas sics in cinema. Students can’t be fully educated until they have this back ground in cinema knowledge.” Texas A&M is the largest place most students will ever live, Hick man said. If cultural opportunity is not made accessible to the students while they are here they will never get it, he said, so Alternative Cinema is just what Texas A&M needs. Hickman said Texas A&M is hurt ing because there is not a large visual arts program. The situtation is get ting better but there are only limited resources available, he said. Hickman said the films chosen for the fall represent the best in the his tory of cinema. Hickman has been trying to organize something like this for a while. “Most of our subscribers are fac ulty members and professional peo ple in the community that were wait ing for a cultural opportunity like this to begin,” he said. Membership in Alternative Cin ema is by subscription basis. Hick'- man said the pass is transferable and each holder is entitled to 10 admis sions. Hickman said the point is to make the chib as flexible as possile at five hos| job in symp District 1 sale and I tals and sev ing a brea Workers at walked off No new see no rea quick resol Hickman said it is a “threMi—, show.” Bill Jenks, an audioref.. 8i arl le ■ specialist with the College Ardiits lure and Environmental Design,>j be the projectionist. Karen HiM associate professor of environment design, is the third member o(a learn. Hickman said the cinema willa accept memberships in the fall mediator F long as iheYe seating is avatt -j-hg wo Subscriptions are $20 a semestf pisls, cook: After the season begins the subset. —dernant lion fees will be prorated on thebs and alien of the number of films remainiij Hickman said. The season will begin on Sept I with “Black Orpheus,” made in8' zil in 1960. “Wild Strawberrie made in Sweden in 1957 will shown on Oct. 24. The season end, on Nov. 14. with “Lacoinbc, ejen,” made in France in 1,974.1 movies are shown Wednesday)/ nings in the Architecture Aultj rium. Cc ill I n 1 A ■I: . Uni W AS F thought c turns yoi may be e> esi social Characters grow into cocaine ely, accot sity of An The sy Doonesbury returning in fal of any tes ness, swi fear of fa But Dr chologist United Press International KANSAS CITY, Mo. — The Pu litzer-Prize winning Doonesbury comic strip, which last ran in Jan uary 1983, will return Sept. 30 with characters who have grown into “co caine and herpes,” Universal Press Syndicate has announced. The adventures of college student Mike Doonesbury and his pals from Walden Pond ended when their cre ator Garry Trudeau said he wanted to take a break so he could take a fresh look at the characters. “My characters are understand ably confused and out of sorts,” he said at the time. “It’s time to give them $20 haircuts, graduate them and move them into the larger world of grown-up concerns.” Since Trudeau’s leave of absence, Universal Press Syndicate said it has been “inundated with questions” about the return of the satirical comic strip. “Garry felt his characters needed some time to make the journey from ‘draft beer and mixers to cocaine and herpes,”’ said John P. McMeel, president of the Fairway, Kan.-based Universal Press, in announcing the revival of Doonesbury. “On Sept. 30, when the Doonesbury saga resumes, readers will see just how well they have fared.” Trudeau was 22 and just out of Yale School of Architecture when “Doonesbury” debuted in 28 news papers Oct. 26, 1970. As of Jan. 2, 1983, the last time the comic strip appeared, 726 news papers in the United States and abroad (with readership of 60 mil lion) were running “Doonesbury.” The antics of Trudeau’s charac ters sometimes generated such con troversy that editors refused to run certain sequences, moved them to editorial pages or tried to bury the strip in the classified section. During his sabbitical, Trudeau worked on his broadway musical of the same name. “Doonesbury,” which opened at New York’s Biltmore Theater Nov. 21, 1983, and ran for 125 perfor mances, was not considered a lii cial success but generally recei' good reviews. His animated Film, “A Doo»f bury Special” for NBC-TV was n°| inated for an Oscar and received Special Jury Prize at Cannes! Festival. In 1975, he became theft | comic strip artist to win a Pulitf Prize for cartoons. Trudeau is currently writinf' screenplay about the While m press corps for Orion pictures ft another about the New Right fori lumbia Pictures. Robert F there, st unique ai “It’s r someone der to th Glass sai |‘Yes, I’n vous anc to a com] Glass more th; sionals - rolled in course — the anxi< Asked Trudeau is married to Jane ley, anchorwoman on the NBCf day show, and has two children. When Doonesbury last appears Duke had just been busted 4 was on ice in the slammer. Joft and Rick’s son had turned upduti 1 the middle of one of their Lain 1 ’ classes. Graduation seemed kJ threatening the students at WaW Commune. pulers,” and 78 p They thought: terminal Er HiaiWe’re Priced BigM! At All Star Audio you’ll get low discount prices, quality and service — without the hassle! Most major credit cards accepted! ROADSTAR RS-2040 AM/FM cassette car stereo $49.95 SONY SL-2710 Top-of-Une Beta HI-FI VCR $888.88 AUDIO TECHNICA AT-71e Magnetic phono cartridge $24.88 SONY KV-1962 Trinitron 19" Cable Ready TV $399.95 WHISTLER Spectrum Top-of-Une radar detector $249.95 AT&T Traditional touch-tone telephone $59.95 JENSEN ATZ-100 LCD Digital cassette car stereo $299.95 SONY XS-613 Thin mount coax car speakers $69.95 pr. HOUrS! Monday Friday 10am 8pm. Saturday 9am-6pm i We will beat any competitor’s College Station store has moved to: bateTm eau^ e BRYAN Hours: Monday thru Friday 10AM to 7PM; Saturday 10AM to 6PM . ^ rnndirinnc 3601 East 29th Street 846-1768 formerly Dyer Electronics in Brookwood Square ♦ m 7 7 the item. * * 4c 4c 4c * * 4c * 4c 4c 4c Celebrate National Ice Cream Day AUS porarib tin, its lercon com pa ■ the reg cial iro i Texas A&M Creamery (Spence St. location Ice Cream Cones Tuesday & Wednesday July 17th & 18th 35y! each i “Thi: the pre Ray La perviso LaCi pensioi but lh« sumpli lercon t The termini Eme pandec V PizzaworksJ Dc It’s Twosday! Medium 2 Topping Pizza 2 Cokes $6 Call Dave’s for Great Pizza! (S) AU: Battalion Classified 845-2611 696-DAVE 326 Jersey St. (Next to Bother’s Bookstore) OPEN 11 a.m. econoa the dc* ital cii percei Conns MoncL Api down* percea the la=