Friday, September 7, IQS^The Battalion/Page 15 Say... nrleliieke^ DISCOUNT MUFFLERS AMERICAN AND FOREIGN CAR SPECIALIST SHAVING'S ‘ Ss NCISCO . K,< 1 tllS Sfcov a, Kl Sl am lr . w ;i scven-i, Astros rouf ( 'Unts I4.51 ii * FITS MANY SMALL CARS * AT PARTICIPATING DEALERS One of the finest nan in automotive parts! BRYAN ... . 408 South Texas Ave. (Corner of 30th St.).... 775-01 88 Individually Owned & Operated IN AND OUT IN 30 MINUTES IN MOST CASES OPBI DAILY AND SAT.8 6 PM Copyright©1 984 Meineke mm Mb nick out^l lt ‘ °n the »» season , fc also h4 -•for-4au[ three runs. 1,1 ‘he gamt " ‘‘rsi innjjj he v (7-12). "‘to (rouble 'he first wly nan who »( f ihi ripp^g 8 nifi movrdir >y Denny bi . Jerry Mto illingtheltol Irjwedwitb).: refilled [ht ; •ne for Rp *r the ngbu BRAZOS m VALLEY Ycj GOLF DRIVING RANGE Mon.-Fri. 3-10 p.m. Sat. 12-10 p.m. Sun. 1pm-8pm 696-1220 East Bypass and Hwy. 30. Sarvlca Road Going South - V« milaa. • Rti 313 College Main - Two Blocks Behind Loupot's 8 FREE Tokens Worth $1 00 With This Coupon -Come In Soon- Come In And Play The Best For Less! Kiigmt ions. ii is (wHitionn; j ae." Kushsa e Oilers, Gf n (he tioltsra intis Dklf Dickey hi Kill .igainsa c game win •fitted froc^ mii over lit: . ii will haw? tobeatthtfi hurt usthi! ee Jet score g point nn le second is It could haw: us. But thtu - e game. Ini • lilferenipu > the seconds 1E.UNDERGR0I!) SBISA feLUTM MtS- Th^- LInpbrgrou fbK A TA6r& 'Fk&a-c QOOCP | < I LL^S-AU UNDERGOUNO DELI & STORE OPEN Mon - Fri Full Breakfast 7:30 AM- 10:30 AM Lunch 10:30 AM-1:45 PM UNDERGROUND SNACKS & GAMES OPEN Mon - Fri Games 7:30 AM-4:00PM Snacks 11:00 AM - 4:00 PM Quality First] m ° k! MSC DPAS ised cines, d With g Foods js Tax, :00 P.M DAY IG LL Steak avy »es and other ; and Butter ea TWELVE Memorial Student Center The Opera and Performing Arts Society ECIAL ening linner i uce ssing & Butter ia y of any de TICKET INFORMATION: MSC BOX OFFICE 845-1234 Here's what the critics say! The Black Light Theatre - of Prague September 18, 1984 . "A totally gorgeous evening of beauty, colour, magic and music." THE IRISH TIMES The London Philharmonic Orchestra Klaus Termstedt Conducting October 18, 1984 . . music-making to keep everyone on the seat’s edge." THE LONDON TIMES Western Opera Theater La Cenerentola" (Cinderella) October 29, 1984 // .excellent — professional and pure, secure and sparkling.' SACRAMENTO BEE St. Paul Chamber Orchestra Pinchas Zukerman Playing and Conducting January 24, 1985 "If there was ever a case of love at first sound, this is it." NEWSWEEK Emanuel Ax Pianist February 25, 1985 . .a pianist with spectacular fingers and a distinct poetic gift. NEW YORK TIMES The King's Singers March 19, 1985 . enormous popularity in what might have been considered an esoteric field/’ BBC The Houston Ballet "Mixed Repertoire" April 10, 1985 .a credit to America.. .even a credit to Texas!’ NEW YORK POST Texaco to can workers Coast jobs to be lost United Press International PORT ARTHUR — Texaco USA announced Thursday it will lay off 1,400 workers and slash production at its 82-year-old refinery. Additionally, Du Pont will end methanol production at its nearby Beaumont plant with the loss of 140 jobs. Unemployment in the Texas coastal area has been running at above 10 percent for several months. Lee T. Townsend, the Port Ar thur area manager for Texaco, said the layoffs will begin Nov. 6 and in volve both union and non-union em ployees. He said a 60-day notice was served to Oil, Chemical and Atomic Worker Union locals early Thurs day. The refinery currently employs about 3,000 workers, although Tex aco has an additional 1,600 employ ees in Jefferson County. Union jobs to be cut include those of operating, maintenance and clerical employees, Townsend said. The layoffs are expected to be completed by latejanuary. Company officials said discussions with unions representing the af fected workers would begin immedi ately. Paul Weeditz, public affairs coor dinator, said the refinery’s rated op erating capacity will be cut from 400,000 barrels of crude oil per day to about 200,000 barrels. However, he said over the past two and a half years the plant has taken in an aver age of only 240,000 barrels per day. Principle operations of the plant will be the manufacture of lubricat ing base oil stocks, premium gaso line, petrochemical feed stocks and byproducts associated with those processes. Townsend said the reduction is necessary because petroleum prod ucts demand has declined substan tially from peak levels of a few years ago and current refinery runs in the United States are as much as 25 per cent below capacity. In addition, gasoline imports for the first six months of 1984 were up 40 percent over the same period in 1983, while demand for gasoline in the United States was up only 1.8 percent, Weeditz said. “Our objective is to make the Port Arthur refinery a more efficient op eration which can compete success fully now and in the future,” Towns end said. Du Pont officials said methanol production will end Jan. 1 as part of the company’s plan to discontinue methanol sales. The plant currently employs 1,350 workers, but only 140 are employed in methanol produc tion. The other employees are in volved in the production of two syn thetic rubbers and three chemical intermediates. Du Pont plant manager David J. Willette said normal attrition, trans fers and reassignments will reduce the number of employees who might eventually be laid off. “To further minimize the number of people who might be laid off, the plant is planning to offer a voluntary termination incentive,” Willette said. Henry Lucas provides law officers tour of California murder sites United Press International LOS ANGELES — At least 15 gruesome California murders have been solved by an exhaustive es corted tour of the state that con demned serial killer Henry Lee Lu cas gave law officers, Attorney General John Van de Kamp said Thursday. Lucas, 48, who has been sen tenced to die in Texas, has claimed to have committed more than 360 murders nationwide during an eight-year spree. Authorities have linked him with 175 killings, includ ing the 15 confirmed during his trip to California. “Lucas is considered to be one of the most brutal mass murderers in this nation’s history,” Van de Kamp said. Lucas led officers to dozens of sites across the state during a 10-day trek last August, telling how and where 14 female victims and one male were murdered. His youngest victims in California were 4 and 5-year-old girls abducted from their homes, beaten, strangled and buried in a dry river bed in San Luis Obispo County. One was also raped. Van de Kamp told reporters that Lucas claimed he and a companion, Ottis Toole, committed the Califor nia the string of killings from 1975- 83, following Lucas’ release from a Michigan prison. Toole is now in prison in Florida for murder, arson and other crimes. The California slayings took place throughout the state, ranging from Imperial County near the Mexican border to Humboldt County near the Oregon border. Others occurred in Orange, Riverside and San Ber nardino counties in Southern Cali fornia, and Kern, San Luis Obispo and Yolo counties in Central and Northern California. In a videotape shown to reporters, Lucas said he used various methods to kill people so police would not find a pattern in the murders. “I’ve committed shootings, stab- bings, beatings and crucifixions of humans,” Lucas said in an interview with ABC earlier this year. The tour culminated effort by the Attorney General’s Office to resolve 67 possible crimes believed linked to Lucas, primarily by his own statements, Van de Kamp said. “Lucas, it seems, decided to talk because he claims to have had a ‘reli gious experience’ while incarcerated in Texas, and he wanted to let fami lies know what had happened to their loved ones,” the attorney gen eral said. Van de Kamp said he wants to ar range another trip for Lucas to in vestigate more possible murder sites. Lucas, sentenced to death earlier this year in Texas for the murder of an unidentified hitchhiker in 1979, also has been convicted of three other murders, including the stab bing death of Frieda “Becky” Powell, his 15-year-old companion. Lucas was first imprisoned at age 18 in Virginia for burglary. Follow ing his release in 1959, Lucas stabbed and killed his mother in Michigan. He served 10 years for that murder, six in a state mental hospital. After being paroled in 1970, Lu cas returned to prison for five years for kidnapping and was released in 1975. % B m For more information ^ W contact The MSC Endowed Lecture Series at 845-1515 JJu nr Memorial Student Center