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About The Battalion. (College Station, Tex.) 1893-current | View Entire Issue (Nov. 29, 1984)
.ee©ee>' , >e>©e<©©e>e>©e>©©©©©©©©©«> € NO MSC g C€PH€ID I VRRIRQL6 MOVI€ THIS THURS. IT IS CALLED “PON FARR” . THE BURNING. S€€ TH€ CflBIN€T OF DR. CRUGRRI & LOST LUORLD TU€S. D€C 4 >rks. Leagm I be Mil Helen Pern ie Calendar. Hcome at ali j With 3 Foods, sTax. iOOP.M' 3AV G l Steak avy ies and other and Butter ea ecial fENlNC )inner :h tuce >ssing i& Butter ea /y 3 of any ble IKE SAW ias, The students the dec- CBrtarwooa Apartments Now preleasing for Spring • Summer & Fall Shuttle Bus • No Utility Deposit • Covered Parking • Two Pools • Plot Tub and Sauna • Weightroom • Basketball & Volleyball courts A College Station tradition in fine living 1201 Harvey Rd. Managed by Brentwood Pn, n.-rim 693-3014 i ij j u u ij u y w hr* vtf vu tra w w iai w w vu tn* w iai vw WW vu t FILM DEVELOPING SPECIAL -C-41 Color Print Film Only- Good on orders for one print each negative. Second set of prints at time of developing only 100 each. Offer good Nov 26th thru Nov 30th 1984 PHOTOGRAPHIC SERVICES AT GOODWIN HALL & TAMU BOOKSTORE AGGIE SPECIAL A&M vs. U.T. DEC. 1 COME TO AUSTIN - STAY WITH US. WE'RE BRAND NEW & CONVENIENT TO U.T. $39.00 RATE SINGLE OR DOUBLE OCCUPANCY CALL COLLECT (512) 450-0135 OFFER GOOD FRI., SA T., SUN. NITES WITH MENTION OF AD EXECUTEL MOTOR INN 1-35 & 183 Battalion Classified 845-2611 Thursday, November 29, 1984/The Battalion/Page 15 m n Ji- wnaf s ujp Thursday CHI ALPHA: Ls meeting lor Bible study, prayer, worship and: fellowship in 110 Rudder. CHURCH OF CHRIST STUDENT ORGANIZATION: is meeting at 7:50 pan. in the All Faiths Chapel. "Creation v. Evolution" will be the topic oTdistmsion, All students are invited. STUDENT Y FISH CAMP: applic ations lot t hah man, svtb- diairman and recreation coordinator are available on the second floor of the Pavilion. Application deadline is Dee. t>, AGGIE PARENTS OF THE YEAR: the Student Govern- mem Parents' Weekend Committee is now at copting appli cations for Parents of the Year. Applications to nominate your parents are available at (he MSC. SPO. Commons, Li brary, Guard Room and the Student Government Office. THE CANTERBURY HOUSE AND HTLLEL: are having a bonfire Open House, directly across the st reet from Dun can Field at 7 pan. There will be free hot chocolate and do nuts.. A one-year meinebership to the Gun's of Texas will he given away. Friday TAMU CHESS CLUB; is meeting at 7 pan. in 510 Rudder, Players of all strengths are welcome. Items for What’s Up should he submitted to The BattaT ion, 216 Reed McDonald, no less than three days prior to desired publication date. Group opposes Nativity scene United Press International WASHINGTON — A major Jew ish group wants the government to wait for one more Supreme Court ruling, expected next year, before adding a Nativity scene to the na tional Christmas display near the White House, an official said Wednesday. Jeffrey Sinensky, legal director of the Anti-Defamation League of B’nai B’rith, pointed to a pending high court case that may clarify a ruling last March that allowed Paw tucket, R.I., to maintain a publicly owned Nativity scene set up on pri vate property. Based on that ruling, a Virginia man has offered to provide a creche for the National Park Service to set up as part of the National Christmas Pageant on the Ellipse just south of the White House. For the past 11 years, the decora tions for pageant have been non-re ligious. The Park Service is part of the Interior Department, which had no comment on the matter Wednes day. Sinensky argued that putting up the display is premature. “The situation is in a state of flux. The court has another Nativity scene case on its docket,” he said. “Why not wait one more season to allow the Supreme Court to decide? Then we’ll all know the law.” Sinensky referred to a case now before the court over a private Na tivity scene in Scarsdale, N.Y., set up on public land, and which city offi cials do not want. Sinensky and others argue that erecting such representations of the birth of Christ on public property vi olates the constitutional doctrine se parating church and state. Sinensky said the high court’s agreement to review the Scarsdale case is a sign the justices might refine their ruling. “If the court had wanted to leave the issue alone, it would have re fused to review our case,” he said. A decision in the case, not yet set for argument, is expected by July. In a letter Tuesday to Interior Secretary William Clark, Kenneth Bialkin, the league’s national chair man, said making the Nativity scene part of the Christmas Pageant is “in sensitive to non-Christians." “I just don’t think it’s wise for the government to take steps to utilize religious symbols in a public fash ion,” Bialkin said Wednesday. CIA spy suspect gets delay in bail hearing United Press International NEW YORK — A Czech-born CIA employee who allegedly infil trated the spy agency as a double agent and stole American secrets for 19 years was formally charged with espionage Wednesday. A bail hearing for the suspect, Karl Koecher, 50, was postponed until today, however, at the request of his lawyer, Joseph Calluori, who said Koecher planned to plead inno cent. The lawyer said he did not have enough time with his client since Koecher “was snatched off the street” Tuesday. The lawyer said Wednesday’s hearing was “a strange proceeding done for the benefit of the press.” Calluori said Koecher’s wife, Hana, 40, was being held as a material witness and was not for mally charged. Prosecutor Barry Bohrer said he planned to request that no bail be set, as the risk was high that both would flee. Under a new federal law a de fendant can be held without bail un til trial if the government can prove there is a risk of flight or the de fendant poses a danger to the com munity. I he defendant has the right to a hearing. Koecher and his wife were ar rested 4:15 p.m. Tuesday as they were leaving their Manhattan apart ment for Kennedy International Airport. During the two-minute proceed ing Wednesday, the couple stood calmly before U.S. Magistrate Reice Buchwald with their wrists hand cuffed behind their backs and af firmed that they understood the for mal accusation. Koecher has been charged with providing classified national security information to the Czechoslovakian Intelligence Service, which carries a maximum sentence of life imprison ment. The defense lawyer said the gray haired, bespectacled Koecher, who was casually dressed in gray cordu roy pants and a black sweater, had a doctorate in philosophy from Co lumbia University. The lawyer said Koecher and his wife, dressed in black slacks and a black and white tiger print shirt, worked together at a jewelry busi ness. Koecher wvs to be held overnight in the Metropolitan Correctional Center. His wife, said to have been a Czech intelligence courier from 1974 to 1983, was also being held. The FBI said the couple sold their cooperative apartment Monday and were scheduled to leave on a jet for Zurich, Switzerland. “They intend to reside in Austria and do not intend to return to reside in the United States,” FBI special agent Kenneth Geide said in court papers. The FBI said Koecher, who immi grated to the United States and be came a citizen, met with an agent Friday and outlined a 19-year spying career that included such cloak-and- dagger tactics as passing classified documents in cigarette packs. Officials did not say why Koecher was not arrested upon Friday’s inter view with the FBI agent or why he then tried to leave the country. r DRIVING COURSE December 3rd and 4th Ramada Inn Pre-register by phone: 693-81 78 FEE $20 Ticket Deferral and 10% Insurance Discount ^MSC Barber & Style Shop^ Located in lower level of MSC Shine Man on duty For your shiny Needs 846-0629 Sandwich City Post Oak Mall FREEBEER Every Thursday 5-8 p.m, Delicious Sub Sandwiches & Free Beer v Pizza-N-Subs Northgate next to Kinko's FREE BEER Every Friday 2-8 p.m. Delicious pizza by the slice 150 feet from the Cowhop's back door. 315 Patricia behind Loupot's fe€F0R€ orrtfTCRtheGflmC, com* SHOP at flUSTIlVS X w , o p. mi 2KZ?' ■ mis : ?£4fe' ebiLCCimfs^ pH V-^SHOUlii ZrnJt stS -A- A? ©n 2 FOR $ 12 SALE ON ANY $8.98 or $9.49 CASSETTE or LP FREE DRINKS AND GOOD TIMES ! EVERY FRIDAY books • records • video CULPEPPER PLAZA