Thursday, January 24, 1985/The Battalion/Page 7 TATI? ANFfc I r*r*AI ssemencd •• e >n pniv ^ on a nim' Itndani tj ill murderr ofthekib wo weeks i li they he?; ley had st ■oberts,piJ wt telljJ onviciionj en appejj ■rts was ay! ling theti iljustrapd d to liftf •ty to ajc tew case'* lenience, them daf' /'re gi'Uj;: on, whitkl s said. 'I hat not I : very sa .1 some4tty stifyit." | )eris, amt .nife, fm to withdii iccount' mfouna Town Amnesty International sponsors race Saturday, Jan.2<> Amnesty Internationa! Road run no rs will hi>kl a 5 km “Runt Against Torture. v The race begins at 8:30 a.m. on Joe Routt Slvd, at G. Rollie White. An awards ceremony wall begin at 9:20 a.m. at the starting line. Registration is $6 in advance and $8 on the day of the race. Forms can be obtained from A! or Roadrunners at 216 MSC. Proceeds will go to Amnesty International USA. SIP llif' TAMU After Hours offers driving class Driver Safety certain traffic automobile in* OCA looking for apartment reps Off-Caropus Aggies has positions open for apartment council presidents in the A&M community. AGF’s are responsible for off campus poster distribution. Inteiested {persons can sign up in 223 Pavilion or call 845-0688 for details Service sorority holds Founders 1 Day luesday n her haf ). pulled •erts beos ;hherp ; forced, nake a ii -up wio| c she said trie Can “a daiBJ ted for l barged >e in ass ling aps d robbeoi sand ravatedst ary in It of anofi : • Deha Sigma Theta is presenting their First Annual Founders' Day luncheon on Sunday. Jan. 27 at 2 p.m. in 201 MSC. Dr. Edith Irley Jones, president of the National Medical Association will be the guest speaker. Reservations can be made until Thursday, Ian.24. For more information contact Teresa Brashear at 266-0904 or Karen Williams at 260-8389. Fellowship offered for spring semester The W.G. Mills Fellowship (iomnmt.ee is receiving applications tor the W.G. Mills Fellowship in Hydrology for the spring semester of 1985. Fellowships in hydrology will lie used to provide financial 'Rapport to four or more highly qualified graduate students in hydro logy. Outstanding students interested in hydrology, should call Eve lyn Teaff at 845-1851 for information and details. Sports car club hosts aufocross Sunday The TAMU Sports Gar Club will hold Spring Autocross I Sun- A^t 27 phe event is open to everyone and competition will be .. v ^ ttrt*. A. r . I lie C\vl«t MJJv-U vV VVCiyvJlHr «s< i J V* VVtXI UC ''within cars of the same class. Registration begins at 9 a.m. in Zac hr y Parking lot 51. Timed runs begin at i p.m. t here will be a registra tion fee and trophies awarded. . ■ • • . To submit art item for this column, come by The Battalion office in 216 Reed McDonald. Lawmakers focus on drinking bills Associated Press AUSTIN — Several bills intro duced in the Texas Legislature this year would combat drunk driving, and the lawmaker sponsoring three of them says he hopes the state’s “frontier mentality” is enough of a memory for action to be taken. But Rep. Gary Thompson, D-Abi- lene, admits that changing some laws will mean bucking Texas tradition. Thompson has introduced bills to ban happy hours, prohibit drinking while driving and raise the drinking age from 19 to 21. Other lawmakers have introduced proposals of their own. The federal government is pres suring the states, with the threat of withholding highway funds, to raise the drinking age. The Texas Alco holic Beverage Commission already has banned two-for-one drinks in a move against happy hours. Thompson says outlawing open containers in motor vehicles could be the toughest fight. Although some people might say drinking oeer while driving is as Texan as boots and blue jeans, Thompson insists there is consider able public support for such a ban. “I did a poll in my district last ses sion,” he said. “Positive response was in the 80 percent range. “Time after time, I have had strangers, people on the streets, con stituents come up to me and remark how paradoxical it is to try to control the effects of DWI (driving while in toxicated) and still have no law that forbids drinking while driving.” Also in the fight is Sen. Bill Sarpa- lius, D-Canyon, who has offered a slightly different open container bill. While Thompson's proposal would ban all open containers, Sar- palius would prohibit carrying an open alcoholic beverage container while driving or while a passenger within five feet of the driver. “In 12 percent of all fatal acci dents on rural highways, an open container of alcohol has been found in one of the vehicles involved,” Sar- E alius said. “No state’s drunk driving iws are complete if they allow drinking while driving.” MSC Visual Arts Committee cordially invites you to an opening reception in conjunction with The Robert Levers exhibition of paintings and works on paper MSC Gallery 7:00p.m. -8:30p.m. Thursday, January 24 Exhibition continues through February 9. Gallery hours are 8:00 a.m. - 8:00 p.m. daily. "^MSC^ECRE^O^* PRESENTS: ACUH QUALIFYING BACKGAMMON TOURNAMENT open w mi Mi REGISTRATION: ON SITE $3 JAN. 24 301 Zorn RUDDER PLEASE BRING REGULATION SIZE BOARDS FOR MOR E INFOR M ATION CAL L 845-1515 Battalion Classified 845-2611 Sarpalius spearheaded the 1983 drive to toughen penalties on drunken driving, including manda- toryjail terms for some convictions. Joining the fight will be Mothers Against Drunk Driving. MADD in 1983 helped lobby lawmakers for stiffer drunk driving penalties. Marinelle Timmons, president of the Texas MADD chapter, said pas sage of an open container ban this year “is our top priority” because “we don’t think Texas will ever take drunk driving seriously as long as it’s legal to drink and drive.” Thompson said his 21-year-old drinking age bill has a chance of be coming law. It includes a provision to allow people under 21 to serve al coholic beverages, he said, adding, “That was a concern of some of the opponents of the bill in the past.” The happy hour ban legislation comes on the heels of the Alcoholic Beverage Commission’s Dec. 27 rul ing which prohibited clubs, restau rants and oars from offering two drinks for the price of one. The ruling stopped short, how ever, of prohibiting other happy hour gimmicks such as free drinks for women, drinks twice as large as normal or serving pitchers of drinks. Although one newspaper column ist branded Thompson’s happy hour bill a “joy-killing measure,” the law maker says it, too, is needed. “The bill takes the decision of the Alcoholic Beverage Commission to its logical conclusion — doing away with gimmicks that would encourage people to overindulge,” he said. The anti-liquor legislation faces a number of obstacles, backers say, in cluding the Legislature’s past failure to act and possible opposition from liquor lobbyists. Last session. Speaker Gib Lewis was criticized for stacking the House Liquor Regulation Committee with opponents of open container and higher drinking age legislation. The committee this year has the same chairman, Rep. Billy Hall, D- Laredo, but several new members. Society NOW HIRING BALLET TEACHERS For More Information Call Jenny 260-0658 Kelly 696-6125 CUSTOM SOUNDS Kicking Off The New Year With R DEALS DESIGN ACOUSTICS PS-10 Hear ’em to Believe’em! NOW 199 95 reg. 329 00 Dolby B, DBX, M.S A really nice cassette deck! KENWOOD KRC-3100 ioow/c,ex9 3 WAY CAR SPEAKERS 2 Year Warranty! ADVENT “THE BABY” Small in Size Big in Sound! Digital, M.S., HM., Auto Reverse Super Hot Low Price! NOW 129 95 reg. 2Q0 00 Dolby B, V U. Meters Super Value! THE #1 STORE FOR QUALITY STEREO & SERVICE! 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