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About The Battalion. (College Station, Tex.) 1893-current | View Entire Issue (Nov. 12, 1984)
Page 6/The Battalion/Monday, November 12, 1984 billy jack’s of College Station 319 University in Northgate Home of the Tuesday Night Drink & Drown! GAe. 0*1 4*iU OPEN SUN.-FRI. 10:30 a.m.-midnite SATURDAY 10:30 a.m.-l a.m. ! LUNCH SPECIAL ! DINNER SPECIAL 10:30-2:30 £ Buy Any Hamburger And Get Your Drink* Free ■ ■ ■ ■ H ■ 4 p.m.-CLOSING With Any Food Purchase Receive Your Drink* Free s * 10 oz. draft, 16 oz. soft drink or ^ * 10 oz. draft, 16 oz. soft drink or bottomless tea glass Expires M/18/84 H bottomless tea glass Expires M/18/84 1 ■ 1 Have yourself golden Christmas C©IN Give a Krugerrand to someone you love. Choose also from a wide variety of sparkling diamonds, gold chains and other fine jewelry. Diamond earring jacket .50 pts. t.w. Our price: $435°° Compare elsewhere: $950°° 1.00 ct. t.w. diamond earring studs, Our price: $1515“ Compare elsewhere: $2500“ 50 pts. t.w. diamond earring studs Our price: $525“ Compare elsewhere: $995“ Diamond & Ruby Bracelet 25 pts. t.w. Our price: $380“ Compare elsewhere: $795“ Assorted ladies cocktail rings 1 ct. t.w. Our price: $595“ Compare elsewhere: $1200“ 2mm rope bracelet 24” herringbone chain 20” 3mm rope chain 18” herringbone chain 20” 2mm rope chain Our price: $60“ Compare elsewhere: $140“ Our price: $195“ Compare elsewhere: $395“ Our price: $80“ Compare elsewhere: $150“ 1 4mm rope bracelet Our price: $130“ 24” herringbone chain Our price: $19£ Compare elsewhere: $295“ Compare elsewhere: $39! 3” 3mm rope chain Our price: $266“ 18” herringbone chain Our price: $8( Compare elsewhere: $800“ Compare elsewhere: $15( 0” 2mm rope chain Our price: $165“ Compare elsewhere: $500“ ‘NEVER A SALE Just the best price in town.” Mastercard and Visa accepted. Full time jewelry repairman on premises 404 University Or. East • College Station • 846-8905 3202 A. Texas • Bryan • 779-7662 Next to Cenare’s Across from Wal-Mart Have a Great Weekend But have a BETTER Weekday This offer good only on Monday, Tuesday, & Wednesday through Nov. 21,1984 SPXCJAl peijwnv Pizza -Hut. PIZZA HUT DELIVERS! FSorth Campus 260-9060 501 University Dr. (northgate) South College Station 693-9393 1 1 03 Anderson (at Holleman) NORTH/SOUTH 260-9060 693-9393 $2 OFF Any 15" Pizza / ***m% Y FREE DELIVERY! X Pi^a '+lut Mon.-Thurv l 1 am I am fri.ar Sat. I lam 2am Sun. I 2 noon midnight Limited Delivery area . Good M-T-W hot Valid with other specials Expires hovember21,1984 NOKTH/SOUTH 260-9060 693-9393 $1 OFF / Any 13" Pizza L mm - FREE DELIVERY! V pi££3 -Hut Mon.Thors. I I .mi l .on t ri.t< S.it. I I am 2arn Son. I 2 noon midnight Limited Delivery area Good M-T-W Not Valid with other specials Expires November 21,1984 What’s up Monday CAMAC: is meeting at 7 p.m.in 504 Rudder. LIBERAL ARTS STUDENT COUNCIL: is meeting at 7:30 p.m. in 575 Harrington lower. MSC VARIETY SHOW: applications are available in 216 MSC. TAMU FORESTRY CLUB: is meeting in 101 HFSB. A slide presentation of Southern Pine Beetle Attack in Four- Notch. ALPHA KAPPA PSI: is meeting at 7 p.m. in 120 Blocker. Dress is casual. AMNESTY INTERNATIONAL: is meeting at 8:30 p.m. in 507 Rudder. AGGIE ALLEMANDERS: the square dance class is meeting at 7 p.m. in 212 MSC. The club will meet at 8:30 p.m. PI SIGMA EPSILON: is meeting at 6:30 p.m. in Zachry lobby. Yearbook pictures will be taken. Business attire re quired. Tuesday RESIDENCE HALL ASSOCIATION: is meeting at 7 p m. in 150 Blocker. Wear your cheap sunglasses. AMERICAN SOCIETY OF LANDSCAPE ARCHITECTS: is meeting at 5:30 p.m. in 105C LAED. Jim Keeler of San Antonio will speak. RANGE CLUB: Gerald Proctor, a manager form Granada Land and Cattle Co., will speak on their grazing systems and how Granada has been effected by droughts. fKe pro gram is at 7 p.m. in 215 ANIN. MSC MADRIGAL DINNERS: the committee is meeting at 7 p.m. in 230 MSC. STUDENT GOVERNMENT FINANCE COMMITTEE: is meeting at 7 p.m. in 203 MSC. TAMU HORSEMAN’S ASSOCIATION: there will be a Pe ruvian Paso Finn riding demonstration at 7 p.m. in the An imal Science Pavilion. BRAZOS VALLEY SIERRA CLUB: “The Garden of Eden,” a nature conservancy film, will be shown at 7:30 p.m. in 507 Rudder. BIOMEDICAL SCIENCE ASSOCIATION: a lecture on em bryo transfer will be presented at 7 p.m. in 201 VMS. GEOGRAPHICAL SOCIETY: is meeting at 8 p.m. in 707 O&M. POLITICAL SCIENCE SOCIETY AND PI SIGMA AL PHA: are meeting in 510 Rudder at 7:30 p.m. to discuss future events. LE CERCLE FRANCAIS: the French dub is meeting at 7 p in. in 502 Rudder. Dues will be collected and party plans will be discussed. TAMU ONE WHEELERS: is meeting at 6 p.m. in the Grove. HISTORY CLUB: is meeting at 7 p.m. in 204 C Evans Li brary. AGGIE GOP: is meeting at 7 p.m. in 206 MSC. Aggieland pictures will be taken after the meeting. TEXAS A&M FORUM; is sponsoring a debate on the ques tion of A&M emphasizing athletics over academics at 7 p.m. in 701 Rudder. Items for What’s Up should be submitted to The Battal ion, 216 Reed McDonald, no less than three days prior to desired publication date. Over 4,00(1 Texas vets file claims United Press International DALLAS — T exas leads the arn how tc nouncemeni eases, and j publicity for The wort e Associ; station Jour ABC'S] Pi he seminar idvantage o turn m numbers of Vietnam Warij : aturc [ a y m erans who have filed claims forps e ‘. of a $180 million trust fundbendi ting veterans exposed to the liant Agent ()range. As of late October, 4,589Toa were among the 70,631 vetera n v seeking a part of the trust' - tablished by seven chemical comp nies that manufactured the hetli t ide, which contains dioxin, H< firms were named in a 1979clasMt lion suit. Houston attorney Benton Mas selwhite, who represents l,i the claimants, attributed the figures to the size of its popubljj and nature of its people “We probably sent a lot morep pie to Vietnam and we are prolai not, as sophisticated at avoidingtnl tary service as some of the otk states," Musselwhite said. “We’rejus good old country hoys.’ The attorney said U.S. Disttic Judge Jack Weinstein of Brooklit has extended until Dec. 31 thedeai University < line for filing claims. Weinsteinals is expected to rule soon onwhetlm a related lawsuit seeking SI hi from the federal goverment may taken to court. The government has been ini niune since 1450 to lawsuits by vela ans claiming service-related injurie Musselwhite said. Attorneys say the biggest dispmt remaining in the case is how tribute the trust fund, which b grown to more than S190 mi with interest. Weinstein is expecw to decide on a disbursement January. Musselwhite expects payments he authorized for victims of dib racne, a skin disease; soft tissuesu coma, a cancer; and prophyriaetna nea tarda, a liver disease. (Me forms of cancer, birth defects ait nervous system disorders also nm lx.* included, he said. The attorney expects disputesot whether emotional problems birth def ects will be authorized lot payments. More than one-thirdd the Texas claims involve birthdt feels attributed to the effects Agent Orange. Martin Luther King Sr. dead United Press International ATLANTA — The Rev. Martin Luther King Sr., father of the slain civil rights leader, died Sunday at his home, a family spokeswoman said. He was 84. King died in the presence of his daughter and grandson Sunday af ternoon, family spokeswoman Ber- nita Bennett said. Christine King Farris, King’s only surviving child, was with her father when he died. Also present was his grandson, the Rev. Derek King, a minister with the Christian Council of Metropolitan Atlanta. “Daddy King,” as he was affec tionately called, preached love and forgiveness despite seeing his wife and eldest son shot down and an other son drown accidentally, all during a six-year period. “I speak to my people about what it means to love,” King said. “We have to rid ourselves of every ounce of hate. I can’t af ford to hate. I know what it leads to.” His son, the Nobel Peace Prize winner and leader of the civil rights movement, was assassinated April 4, 1968, as he leaned over a balcony outside his motel room in Memphis, Tenn., where he had gone to lead a protest by striking sanitation work ers. Sixteen months later, the Rev. Adam Daniel King, the youngest of the elder King’s three children, drowned in his Atlanta swimming pool. On June 30, 1974, King’s wife of 48 years, Alberta Williams King, the woman he called “Honeybunch,” was killed by a crazed youth as she played “The Lord’s Prayer” on an organ in Ebenezer Baptist Church. King took the assassination of his son hard. He fainted while viewing the body and later visited the crypt often, standing at the white picket fence reading the inscription on the marble slab: “Free At Last, Free At Last, Thank God Almighty I’m Free At Last.” He later said he was convinced James Earl Ray, sentenced to 99 years in prison for the slaying, did not act alone, and he called for an in dependent investigation into the as sassination. King’s bitterness seemed to ease somewhat after the death of his wife six years later. “He seems to ha« taken on some of her softness,® spection and serenity,” a close frieni once said. King presided as patriarch of lit King family and the church on lama’s “Sweet Auburn” Aven* where he served as pastor for H years. At age 75, he stepped clown as if nior minister at the 4,000-meml)(i church but continued as pastor-emt ritus and his booming voice oco sionally was heard from thepulpitf In his later years honors poill in for King. In 1983 he received Peace Prize awarded by the Marti Luther King Jr. Center for Nonf lent Social Change, headed by If daughter-in-law Coretta Scott Before it was safe or popular! speak out against discriminationar: segregation, King aligned him*! with people and organizations lb were working for change. a He led a campaign for the equal zation of teachers’ salaries and cot ducted a “voter education” proM from the pulpit of the EbeneW Baptist Church, where he succeedd his father-in-law as pastor. Represeni 40 local set Uni V7l( By Scientists he range a listorv, Dr istory, said His lectm niversity i (injunction The Trans Ideas a ponsored b nces, the ind the Coll “Literary mmankind ight bounc Hist By V The slue of human and the qi Dethloff, h ment at Te “Historit mg increa rapidly ch; technology der to eval have a sem we arederi He stre trained hi world beca ans provid with the hi Poland notes 66 years of independent rule United Press International WARSAW, Poland — A deeply divided Poland marked its 66th year of independence Sunday as thou sands of Solidarity supporters marched to demand a Poland “free” from communist rule and priests warned of a clash between the gov ernment and the church. World War I veterans and gov ernment officials attended a gala concert in Warsaw’s Royal Castle to celebrate the anniversary of Poland’s independence in 1918 after 123 years of partition by Austria, Ger many and Russia. Deputy parliamentary speaker Jerzy Ozdowski, addressing the con cert crowd, called for reconciliation and condemned the recent murder of a pro-Solidarity priest by secret police, which created turmoil within the government and sparked a crisis in church-state relations. But in cities across the nation, Poles still enraged by the kidnap and murder of Rev. Jerzy Popieluszko flocked to churches to hear pro-Soli darity sermons and filled city streets flashing the “V for victory” sign of the banned union. In the .capital of Warsaw, thou sands of helmeted riot, police used water cannons to disperse some 6,000 people chanting “Solidarity, Solidarity” as they left St. Johns Ca thedral in the city’s old town and tried to march to the Tomb of the Unknown Soldier. Catholic priest Stanislaw Malkowski, who visited Popielusz- ko’s parents, said Sunday the couple had been threatened by two men posing as Solidarity militants. Malkowski said the two men had visited Popieluszko’s parents’ farm near the town of Okopy in northeast Poland and threatened to burn it down if church services in their son’s honor gained too much public sup port. No other details were available. In the southern city of Cracow, thousands of Solidarity supporters attended an independence day mass at Wawel cathederal and then marched through the city’s center in support of the union. At Popieluszko’s Warsaw church, where his body was buried Nov. 3, another priest said the murder had “brought forth a new Solidarity in peoples’ hearts and minds.” The church was decked inside with hundreds of illegal Solidarity banners and one strung up outside the building bore the slogan, “In Sol idarity Towards Independence.” Police Beat T he following inridenb reported to the University Pofo Department through Sunday. MISDEMEANOR T HEFT: • A red Road master 10-spef' bicycle was stolen from the ft Rollie White bike rack. • $30 in cash was stolen froniJ student’s room in Spence Hall. BURGLARY OF A MOTOR VEHICLE: • A Pioneer KEA-330 stereo was stolen f rom a 1980 Oidsmo- bile in Parking Annex40. • A Hewlett-Packard 41 Cl calculator was stolen from a air it Parking Annex 48. FELONY THEFT; • Two Nikon cameras awfi Nikomatk: zoom lens were stolen from 31 IB Langford Archited ture. BURGLARY OF A BUILD 1NG; • A Panasonic tape player stolen from 314A Kleberg. HARASSMENT: • A student in Keathley Hall reported receiving several li rassing phone calls from an un known man. • A student in Mosher Hallc- ported receiving several ha rassing phone calls from an un known man. I The to| womem glasses in the beer gl be give under each o sions. c ceive p For fu Br