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About The Battalion. (College Station, Tex.) 1893-current | View Entire Issue (Nov. 7, 1984)
• I Page 10/The Battalion/Wednesday, November 7, 1984 afia 1tzza At Alfredo’s Come and Get it Aggies 16” Pizza Supreme Cheese $g99 846-0079 Hours: 5-12 Daily We Make Our Dough 846-3824 Fresh Daily Open early Thurs. & Fri. Sun. Mon. E 3 Tues. Wed. Thurs. Fri. Sat. 1401 FM Rd. 2818 College Station 693-2818 NIGHTLY SCHEDULE Country Nite Country Nite & Swimsuit Contest Let’s Make a Deal Night La Bare Women only ’til 10p.m. Four for One at 7p.m. Free Champagne for Ladies at 10p.m. Comedy Workshop ProfessionaF comedian from around the country 2 great shows 9:30p.m. & 11 p.m. 4for1 drinks 7p.m.-8p.m. 4 for 1 @ 4 p.m., 3 for 1 2for 1 @6 p.m., Open Bar from 7-9 p.m.- Open Bar from 7-9 p.m.- Bar Drinks & Beer 500 Ail Nite 5 p.m. No Cover for Ladles No Cover for Ladies Double size drinks every night after specials NO COVER 1 1 w/this coupon on any night except Wed. & during open bar I I I iJ What’s up Wednesday TAMU BLOOD DRIVE: Bloodmobiles will be located at the MSC, the Commons, Sbisa and across the tracks through Thursday. Give life, give blood. FLORICULTURE-ORNAMENTAL HORTICULTURE CLUB: Grant Vest will speak on Horticulture at A&M at 7 p.m. in 104 Horticulture Forest Science Building. Pictures for the Aggieland will be taken at 6 p.m. in the MSC. A&M CHRISTIAN FELLOWSHIP: is meeting at 7:30 p.m. in 101 Soil and Crop Sciences Building. KANM RADIO 99.9 FM: join host Hugh Stearns in consid ering the implications of the election returns — is America on the road to Fascism. OFF-CAMPUS AGGIES: is meeting at 6:30 p.m in 601 Rud der. MARANTHA CHRISTIAN FELLOWSHIP: is having a Bi ble study at 7:30 p.m. at the Viking Apartments Club house. PRE-LAW SOCIETY: Columbia University School of Law- will be on campus to talk to juniors and seniors interested in attending their law school from noon to 1:15 p.m. in 342 Zachry. PANAMANIAN STUDENT ASSOCIATION: is meeting at 8:30 p.m. in 504 Rudder. PRE-VET SOCIETY: Dr. Neil Van Stavern, a local small ani mal practitioner will be the guest speaker at 7 p.m. in 607 Rudder. CAP & GOWN: is meeting in Rudder at 7 p.m. STUDENT Y SHARE GROUP: is meeting at 7 p.m. in the All Faith’s Chapel. INDIA ASSOCIATION: is meeting at 7 p.m. in 103 Zachry. Slides will be presented by a visiting scholar and Aggieland pictures will be taken. PRE-THEOLOGICAL SOCIETY: Dr. Richard P. Lord will speak on The Morality of Central America in 501 Rudder at 8 p.m. The public is invited to attend. Items for What’s Up should be submitted to The Battalion, 216 Reed McDonald, no less than three days prior to de sired publication date. Minority precincts Im OK, watchers say & Uni United Press International HOUSTON — Fears of con frontations between Republican and Democratic poll watchers at minority precincts fizzled Tuesday, with vol unteers from both parties reporting calm. Sen. Craig Washington, D-Hous- ton, said Sunday that he had ar ranged for “big, black and burly” men to prevent intimidation by Re publican poll watchers on election day, but a spot check of minority precincts revealed none of his watch ers. “Senator Washington hasn’t asked anybody to come over here,” Mary Helen Kannady said in Houston’s County Republican leaden some women volunteers had with concern after Washington he had arranged for ex-convict watch the Republicans watchthei ers. But at a polling place attradit ally black Wheatley High School, Democratic poll watcher was a pt white woman, who pointed out was not burly. Judy Hatfield said she hadl® of Washington’s statements, tributed them to hot adverseopfn tion by both parties as the drew near. historic Fourth Ward. “We can take care of our own.” Kannady, a black woman who has been a Democratic Party worker for 28 years, said the Republican poll watchers at the Bible Way Baptist Church were just sitting there minding their business. Henry Mora, a white Republican watching voters at a black elemen tary school east of downtown, said- ,“There’s been a lot of rotten press about this.” Mora carried an index card saying he was a poll watcher and was not allowed to talk to voters. “I can only speak for myself,” Mora said. “I have no intention of intimidating anybody and I wasn’t asked to.” Mora said election judge Ernest B. McDonald was running a fair and impartial election, and he didn’t ex pect to find anything different. Hatfield said that both pm feared intimidation but thereli been none. Her Republican counterpt George Payne, joked that he is sweet guy who wouldn’t intimit xL anybody. State Republican Party Chaii George Strake, who said heh been shocked by Washington's nouncement Sunday, said Tues! the GOP had poll watchers in percent of the 6,000 precinos Texas. SAN bounty D that an ii Imrnigrat Service ag inantly H fers. Democ ^Foster sail L uniforn like an IN I Count) nox Du Pf Uni “We have them in black, grc brown, white, every precina Texas where we could get apt watcher,” he said. “You knowaie know tlTere have been votes slot Texas in the past half century.Vi we’re trying to do is insure a election.” WARS graphs ol idarity pi by under appeared savagely by secret Four 1 Ministry, fairs, hav 19 abdut Rev. Jerz for his an Other lice have charged 1 Stri ke Pickets arrested for blocking traffic during shift change ir United Press International WHITE SETTLEMENT — Po lice arrested at least five people out side a General Dynamics plant Tues day following an altercation during a shift change as workers attempted to leave the plant through picket lines. The incident occurred after nego tiations had resumed earlier in the day between Local 776 of the Inter national Association of Machinists and Aerospace Workers and bar gaining representatives of General Dynamics, producer of the Air Force’s main single-engirie fighter jet. The arrests of five or six people came during a shift change when cars blocking the entry of the plant were preventing traffic from leav ing, City Manager Bob Salinas said. ing among union members escalated to bottle and rock throwing, officials said. No violence was reported at the plant Tuesday, unlike the first day of the strike when outbreaks of vio lence led to the arrest of seven peo ple and prompted police to throw tear gas into the crowd. District Judge William Hughes set a hearing for 1 ter issuing p.m. Wednesday af- an order prohibitinf; ig pickets from impeding the entry and exit of vehicles from the plant and injuring, threatening or destroying the property of anyone entering or leaving the plant. A television cameraman and a bi cyclist trying to enter the plant Mon day received minor injuries as chant- Salinas said Hughes’ restraining order might have had an effect on the crowd of 7,500 that gathered outside General Dynamics’ frc gate. I Union members have said: I walkout will shut down producoi;! of the F-16 single-engine figte J However, company spokesman Joe Thornton said proauction oh F-16 and other programs hascont ued. Salinas said the city has arraitf for Fort Worth, Tarrant Count)i: || Department of Public Safetyoffia ? to assist its 12-member policei partment if further trouble anse General Dynamics, the largest t ployer in the area. cast t< millio with t panic Th Mond about famili AGGIE BLOOD DRIVE JOHA — Police rioters ii hannesb killing si of a strik majority Witne units se Sharpev Evaton , 16 arm< trolled 1 killed in 1982 staff photo by David Fisher LOCATION: MEMORIAL STUDENT CENTER THE COMMONS SBISA HALL ACROSS THE TRACKS TIME: 9:00 a.m. until 6:00 p.m. NOVEMBER 5th-8th U Sponsored by: Student Government Omega Phi Alpha Alpha Phi Omega 1981 i ’ It’s A Tradition I