The Battalion. (College Station, Tex.) 1893-current, November 13, 1984, Image 5

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    Tuesday, November 13, 1984/The Battalion/Page 5
Warped
by Scott McCullar
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VARIOUS KINDS Of CHICKEN, DUCK
AND 600SE MEAT.
SOON TRE RESTLESS SPIRITS OP
ALL Of THE PERISHED 8IRD5 T/IEfC
BE6AN TO MAKE THEMSELVES
KNOWN. TEATHER4 STARTED
APPE ARIN6 EVERTWHERE, 06TLCT5
BE&AN EL V | N6 AROUND THE. ROON\
AND PERCHING ON EURNITURE...
...THE SOUNDS OF PECKING AND
SCRATCHING WERE CONSTANT, AND
EVERT HOUR A SPECTRAL ROOSTER
CROWED fROM OUT Of NOWHERE.
BUT IT WAS LITTLE 8 YEAR OLD
CAROL ANN THAT FINALLY
RLAUEED...
SHOE
by Jeff MacNelly
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GO FETOPU
THIS WOUt-P NEVER MAKE
— ©Jefferson Communlcatfona. Inc. 1984
hildren
Study: Income doesn't help eating habits
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United Press International
WASHINGTON — True or false:
ich kids eat better than poor kids.
The answer is f alse.
A study in Ohio found preschool
hildren from high-income and low-
nconre families had a strong len
iency to consume less milk and
ewer fruits and vegetables than they
hould, said Eva Medved, a profes-
or of foods and nutrition at Kent
itate University.
However, poor preschoolers were
wiceas likely to be deficient in these
bod groups as their better-off
peers.
Medved and co-researcher Jane
ixe Chung, a dietician, found 60
aercent of middle- and upper-mid-
■rvices
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dle-income youngsters didn’t drink
enough milk and 40 percent
skimped too much on fruits and veg
etables.
Among low-income preschoolers,
97 percent had inadequate milk in
take and 98 percent not enough
fruits and vegetables.
The bread, cereal and meat
groups seemed to be consumed in
adequate amounts, she said. Sugar
intake was too high and fill content
of the children’s meals was about 50
percent. Thirty percent is consid
ered a good level to help prevent
heart disease.
The study, presented at the an
nual meeting of the American Di-
®LE|y
r a
V Pizzaworks J
It’sTwosday!
Medium 2 Topping Pizza
2 Cokes
I $6.56
Call Dave’s for Great Pizza!
(§> 696-DAVE
etetic Association, included 100 pre
school children in the Akron, Ohio,
area.
The reasons behind the deficiency
are various, but a major factor was
nutritional awareness and a ten
dency for parents not to pay enough
attention to what their kids were eat
ing, Medved and Chung found.
In higher income groups espe
cially, Medved said, parents appar
ently allow children to choose their
foods.
Medved and Chung found most
of the children had one or more
meals a day from fast-food sources,
and their diets were high in proc
essed and convenience foods.
1
•V'
. ■> ' . ,-r.
Vl'M rl'.:' J
326 Jersey St.
(Next to Pother’s Bookstore)
OPEN 11 a.m.
J DAILY
i
ire
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cinema/*
Vivien Leigh
Marlon Brando
a streetcar
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7:30 p.m.
Rudder Auditorium
$1.50
Goldie Hawn
Kurt Russell
Friday, November 16
Rudder Auditorium
7:30 p.m. & 9:45 p.m. §1.50
-K
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Friday & Saturday
NOV. 16-17
Rudder Auditorium
Midnight
$1.50
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Winner of 5
Academy Awards!
Sell it in Battalion Classified
845-2611
Escaped inmate search
called off near El Paso
United Press International
LAS CRUCES, N.M. — Authori
ties Monday called off their search
for two convicted murders who es
caped from the year-old Southern
New Mexico Correctional Facility,
believing the inmates made it to
Mexico, officials said.
The inmates apparently climbed a
fence topped with sharp wire and
evaded a sensor field Sunday night
in making the first escape from the
prison, department spokeswoman
Helen Gaussoin said.
She said footprints that state po
lice and prison officials had been tra
cking all day ended near Canutillo, a
few miles north of El Paso, and just
several miles short of the Mexican
border.
Dozens of searchers, including
Border Patrol agents, had been on
the ground and helicopters were out
most of the day Monday, said state
police Capt. Bob Carroll.
The inmates were identified as
Juanito Garcia, 29, and Ernesto Gu
tierrez, 21, both Mexican nationals
serving sentences for second-degree
murder.
The two men, the first inmates to
escape from the medium-security fa
cility since it opened last year, were
discovered missing about 9 p.m.
Sunday, Gaussoin said.
“The investigation indicates they
went over the top of the fence and
bypassed the sensor field around the
prison,” she said. “We found foot
prints and blood, indicating that one
or both got cut up on the razor wire
on ton of the fence.”
Sniper in stadium kills one,
injures another in Oregon
United Press International
EUGENE, Ore. — A teenage
sniper dressed in combat gear
opened fire at the University of Ore
gon’s football stadium Monday, kill
ing a former Olympic sprinter and
wounding a college wrestler, then
apparently committed suicide, offi
cials said.
The sniper, identified as Michael
Evan Feher, 19, from Everett,
Wash., a former student re-enrolling
at the university, was found dead in
side Autzen Stadium by a police
SWAT team about noon, some 3 Va
hours after the shooting began.
“He was still inside the stadium
when we found him. It appears at
this time he took his own life,” said
Police Sgt. Tim McCarthy.
The sniper, who had blackened
his face and equipped himself with
two high-powered rifles, appeared
“ready to go to war” as he roamed
through the athletic complex, Mc
Carthy said. Police found 60 spent
rounds.
The slain victim was identified as
Christopher Brathwaite, 35, of Eu
gene, a former UO student and
Trinidad native who was a member
of Trinidad’s 1976 and 1980 Olym
pic track teams, school officials said.
Brathwaite also competed for the
University of Oregon track team.
The wounded student was identified
as Rick L. O’Shea, 22, of Harrisburg,
Ore., a top wrestler for the univer
sity. Shot in the neck and buttocks,
he managed to take refuge with nine
others in a weight room inside the
stadium.
Police said the sniper apparently
had two weapons, probably a shot
gun and a rifle.
A police tactical team entered the
weight room and evacuated the 10
people about 2 ’/a hours after the
shooting began, said Sgt. Tim Mc
Carthy.
“We have removed the victim and
the unwounded people at this time,”
McCarthy said.
Police had remained in contact
with the weight room occupants
throughout ihe ordeal by means of a
telephone in the weight room.
Most of the people in the weight
room were thought to be members
of the university’s wrestling team
and a few gymnasts, said Paul
Brown, assistant wrestling coach.
The gunman shot the student at
and fired randomly for about an
hour, at one point shooting at a po
liceman in a parking lot adjacent to
the stadium, authorities said. The
officer was not injured.
After a lull of 50 minutes, two
more shots were fired at 10:20 a.m.
from the stadium’s east tunnel, near
the weight room, officials said.
Jeri Brown, the coach’s wife who
left the weight room with her hus
band before the shooting began,
said, “I don’t remember seeing any
body outside. I just looked to see if it
was raining.”
Authorities said the rifle had a
range of one mile.
Police closed off streets, jogging
trails and bicycle paths. They ad
vised occupants of nearby businesses
to stay indoors away from windows
and for people to stay away from the
area.
f
i
#
*
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COME IN,
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Frozen
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$4.75 $1.25
• PITCHERS OF BEER
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702 University #110B
College Station
846-0085
wise
Cafeteria
MONDAY EVENING
SPECSAL
Salisbury Steak
with
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Whipped Potatoes
Your Choice of
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Coffee or Tea
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Each Daily Special Only $2.59 Pius Tax.
“Open Daily”
Dining: 11 A.M. to 1:30 P.M.—4:00 P.M. to 7:00 P.M.
TUESDAY EVENING
SPECIAL
Mexican Fiesta
Dinner
Two Cheese and
Onion Enchiladas
w/ Chili
Mexican Rice
Patio Style Pinto Beans
Tostadas
Coffee or T ea
One Corn Bread and Butter
WEDNESDAY
EVENING
SPECIAL
Chicken Fried Steak
w/Cream Gravy
Whipped Potatoes and
Choice of one other
Vegetable
Roll or Corn Bread and Butter'
Coffee or Tea
THURSDAY E VENING SPECIAL
Italian Candle Light Spaghetti Dinner
SERVED WITH SPICED MEAT BALLS AND SAUCE
Parmesan Cheese- Tossed Green Salad
Choice of Salad Dressing—Hot Garlic Bread
Tea or Coffee
FOR YOUR PROTECTION OUR PERSONNEL HAVE HEALTH CARDS
FRIDAY EVENING
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Fried Catfish
Filet w/Tartar
Sauce
Cole Slaw
Hush Puppies
Choice of One
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SATURDAY
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Yankee Pot Roast
Texas Style
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Mashed
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w/Gravy
Roll or Corn Bread & Butter
Tea or Coffee
“Quality First”
SUNDAY SPECIAL
NOON and EVENING
Roast Turkey Dinner
Served with
Cranberry Sauce
Cornbread Dressing
Roll or Corn Bread & Butter
Coffee or Tea
Giblet Gravy
And Your Choice of any
One Vegetable