Paqe 6/The Battalion/Tuesday, January 29, 1985 limit one per person -good for $1.00 on carwash or laundry- RHEAS Carwash or Laundry Washing Machine .75 Dryers 5 { Carwash .7! Longmire &Deacon C.S^. ET CETERA . / ' : ■ ■ ■ ^Ji ■ Education Some children 'don't mean as much to school officials' Introductory Scuba Gear Sale! Jan 17 - Feb 4 20% off everything in the reef dive dept, at Tri State Sports Center. Check Our Prices Before Qy: You Buy! Wf ,0 u .S. Divers • Tekna • Dacor • Mares • Sea- quest • Wenoka • Sherwood • Imperial • Ocean Dynamics • Aquacraft • Princeton • Underwater Kinetics • Hever Masks Fins Snorkels Booties Tanks Wetsuits Gauges Regulators Ocean Dynamics B.B. Vest Reg. 169 9s 129 87 Associated Press WASHINGTON — A panel of children’s advocates charged on Monday that millions of poor, hand icapped and minority students are being cheated by America’s public schools, and that the rush to raise standards could make life worse for those at the back of the class. They said the plight of these chil dren, and the ways the schools and government have responded to it, “support the worries of those who fear the development of a perma nent underclass in America.” “The United States cannot afford to leave underdeveloped the talents of millions of children who happen to be born different by virtue of race, language, sex or income sta tus,” said the panel headed by for mer U.S. Commissioner of Educa tion Harold Howe II and Marian Wright Edelman, president of the Children’s Defense Fund. They charged minority and poor children “do not matter as much ... to some school officials,” and that, in Howe’s words, “state and local fi nancing of schools adds up to a con spiracy to spend more money on rich kids and less money on poor kids.” Howe also charged President Rea gan has presided over “an anti-child hood administration.” He said he “did not look for any relief’ in Rea gan’s second term. Howe and Edelman chaired a 17- member board of inquiry that con ducted a two-year study of the schools for the Boston-based Na tional Coalition of Advocates for Students. The 162-page report, “Barriers to Excellence: Our Children At Risk,” exhorts the public and educators to put equal opportunity back at the forefront of the school agenda, where the emphasis in the past few years has been on raising standards and striving for excellence. The report criticized school dis tricts that set up smaller classes for gifted youths. That “detracts from resources available to all other youth,” said the report, which advo cates keeping the gifted in regular classes. At a crowded news conference in an elementary school auditorium, Howe said “the doors of schools are more open than they were 20 years ago” for poor people, blacks, His- panics and students with learning problems. But “we found a lack of commitment to making these stu dents successful once they are in school,” he added. Reports such as “A Nation At Risk,” the influential 1983 study by the Reagan administration’s Na tional Commission on Excellence in Education, have generally called for tougher standards across-the-board. TRI-STATE SPORTS CiffiTEK 2023 Texas Ave., Bryan Townshire Shopping Center 779-8776 Videotape shows Buckley alive, well Graduate To Management What wc offer: • Starting salary in the 20’s • Excellent & rapid advancement opportunities • Best training in the food industry • Good benefits (paid vacation, life & medical insurance, profit shar ing, credit union, free use of company lodges, paid relocation, rapid salary improvement). • Management development programs What wc look for: • Energetic, highly motivated future managers (indicators we review include: above average GPA, work ex perience and extracurricular activities). • Individuals who can express themselves well...think on their feet...and can adapt to a fast pace in an exciting business environment. • Self starters who can and will make decisions • Individuals looking for a challenge and an opportuni ty for self achievement If you want a career opportunity, a place where your hard work will produce results, then sign up for an interview now through the Placement Office. Associated Press LONDON — A U.S. Embassy po litical officer who was kidnapped in Beirut almost a year ago was shown on a videotape Monday saying he and two other missing Americans were well. In Washington, Cable News Net work reported U.S. officials saw an other videotape last summer that showed journalist Jeremy Levin and two others assumed to be captives in Beirut, but the administration urged that the matter be kept quiet at the time. The report said State Department sources had confirmed the existence of the tape. Department spokesman Bernard Kalb, however, refused comment on the CNN report. The tape obtained by Visnews, a London-based international tele vision news agency, showed William Buckley, political officer of the U.S. Embassy in Beirut, standing alone against a blank wall and holding a copy df a Beirut newspaper dated Jan. 22. “Today, the 22nd of January 1985, I am well and my friends Ben jamin Weir and Jeremy Levin are also well,” Buckley said in the 56-sec ond video. “We ask that our govern ment take action for our release quickly.”' The tape did not identify the Americans’ captors nor specify any demands for their release. The only previous demand has come in calls from a group identifying itself “Ji had Island,” Islamic Holy War, call ing for all Americans to leave Leb- Jihad Island is believed made up of fundamentalist Shiite Moslems loyal to Iran’s Ayatollan Ruhollah Khomeini. What’s up Tuesday AGGIE ALLIANCE: will meet at 7 p.m. in 201 MSC.There will be a guest speaker and a discussion of projects for the semester. ALPHA KAPPA PSI: will hold rush from 7 p.m. to8:30p.m in 226 MSC lor all interested business and economics ma jors. Informal attire. For more information call 696-6104 ALPHA PHI OMEGA: will hold rush beginning at 7 p m.in 22*4 MSC. ASIAN—AMERICAN ASSOCIATION: w ill meet at 7 p.m. in 120 Blocker for committee updates and discussion of or ganization. Call 846-1197 for more information. BIG EVENT: wall hold a general meeting at 7 p in. in 7(4 Rudder. CORPUS CHRISTI AREA HOMETOWN CLUB: will meet at 7 p.m. in 308 Rudder. Activities will l>e discussed and dues collected. Call 260-5075 for more information. FOOD SCIENCE CLUB: will meet at 6:30 p.m. in 121 Kle berg. Yearbook picture will l>e taken afterwards. HEB HOMETOWN CLUB: will meet to discuss activities for Ute semester at 7 p.m. in 200 Harrington. HILLEL: will hold a lunch with Rabbi Tarlow from 12 p.m to 1:15 p.m. in the MSC Cafeteria. Discussion of current events and social issues. MSC AMATEUR RADIO COMMITTEE: will meet at8p.m in 504 Rudder. OUTDOOR RECREATION COMMITTEE: will hold a gen eral meeting at 7 n.rn. in 225/226 Rudder. All outdoor lovers welcome. Call 8 45-1515 for more information. PRE—THEOLOGY SOCIETY: will hold a general meeting at 7:30 p.m. in 503 Harrington. Call 696-7452 for more in formation. SAILING TEAM: will meet at 7 p.m. in 109 MLS to discuss upcoming regatta and set up team practices. Call 260-4870 for more information. TAMU FLYING CLUB: will meet at 7:30 n.m. at Flying Club clubhouse. New members welcome. Call 696-9339 for more information. TEXAS A&M ASSOCIATION OF MARTIAL ARTS: will meet from 5 p.m. to 7 p.m. in 267 Kyle. Everyone welcome TEXAS A&M ROADRUNNERS: will meet at'? p.m. in402 Rudder. Call 260-1028 for more information. TEXAS SURVEYOR S ASSOCIATION: will meet at 8 ptr; in 118 Chemical Engineering. Call 845-2419 for more in formation. Wednesday APO SERVICE FRATERNITY: will hold an open mem bership drive beginning at 7 p.rn. in 224 MSC. Call 693- 1488 for more information. CAP & GOWN SENIOR HONOR SOCIETY: will hold an informational session for new members beginning at 7 p.m. in 410 Rudder. Qualifications include a 3.25 GrR and /5 completed hours. DEL RIO HOMETOWN CLUB: will meet at 8:30 p m. in 502 Rudder. All members are urged to attend. MSC CAMAC: will meet at 7 p.m. in *102 Rudder to discuss upcoming events TAMU TENNIS CLUB: at 7 p.m. in 510 Rudder. Call693- 8200 for more information. TEXAS A&M ASSOCIATION OF MARTIAL ARTS: will meet from 5 p.m. to 7 p.m. in 267 Kyle. UNITED CAMPUS MINISTRY: will hold an Aggie Supper and present “What Matters to Me and W r hy” at 6 p.m. in the A&M Presbyterian Church. Court rules phony ‘cure’ wasn’t rape Our Representatives Will Be On Campus February 14th We Are An Equal Opportunity Employer Associated Press SAN FRANCISCO — A man who tricked a woman into having sex by persuading her it would cure her of a fatal disease cannot be prosecuted for rape, a state appeals court ruled. By a 2-1 vote, the 1st District Court of Appeal rejected prosecu tion arguments that Daniel Boro could be charged under a law that says having sexual intercourse with a woman who is “unconscious of the nature of the act” constitutes rape. Despite the “heartless cruelty of (Boro’s) scheme,” his conduct was not rape because the woman “pre-- cisely understood the nature of the act,” said the majority opinion by Justice William Newsom, issued Fri day. Boro still faces charges of at tempted grand theft for allegedly trying to collect money from the woman for the supposed “cure.” Last March, Boro, posing as a doc tor, telephoned the woman in South San Francisco and said a blood test showed she suffered from a possibly fatal disease. Deputy San Mateo County District Attorney Morley Pitt said it was not clear how Boro obtained the wom an’s name. She had had the blood tests run at a hospital. Boro told her the only treatments for her ailments were painful sur gery, costing $9,000 and requiring six weeks in the hospital, or sexual intercourse with an anonymous “do nor” who had been injected with a serum, the court said. The procedure normally cos't $4,500, but the “doctor” said he would take $1,000 as a down pay ment, the court said. The woman went along with the plan, testifying later that she thought she would die otherwise. In barring a rape charge, New cited traditional legal rules thatdi tinguish between two types of framl If the victim is misled about:r nature of the act itself — beliewi that she is not having sexual course — her consent isdisregart and the act is considered to against her will. But if the fraud involves only it motivation for the act, theactisc# sidered consensual. Newsom s this category covered Boro’s cot duct, because the woman undt! stood what she was doing, but«I defrauded only about the motive, Put your degree to work where it can do a world of good. The toughest job you’ll ever love Your first job after graduation should offer you more than just a paycheck. We can offer you an experience that lasts a lifetime. Working together with people in a different culture is something you'll never forget. It's a learning experience everyone can benefit from. In Science or Engineering, Education, Agricul ture, or Health, Peace Corps projects in de veloping countries around the world are bringing help where it's needed. If you're graduating this year, look into a uni que opportunity to put your degree to work where it can do a world of good. Look into Peace Corps. FREE FILM SEMINAR Jan. 29- 7pm Room 228 MSC INFORMATION BOOTH Jan. 29 & 30 9am-5pm MSC Pick up applications at Placement Center For inf call toll free 1-800-442-7294 Ext. 125 June Grads in Marketing, Sales and Distribution: EARN WHILE YOU LEARN VvVr...--~ ^'V/: '• • * YVrty m One of the nation's largest distributors of electronic components and computer products is counting on you to help maintain its dominance in the electronic distribution industry. We're recruiting on campus for talented June Grads to train for careers in Product Management, Field Sales, and Operations. Your Bachelor's degree in Marketing or Industrial Distribution makes you a prime candidate to learn from the preferred team of distribution professionals and help us meet our growth objective for tomorrow. We're offering you an opportunity to earn while you learn from the best in the business, so please check with your Career Placement Office for the dates we'll be on campus and sign up for a personal interview with us today. If you are unable to meet with us, please send your resume to the Kierulff division nearest you (addresses are listed in the Career Placement Office) or send it to: Director, Corporate College Relations 10824 Hope Street Cypress, CA 90630 KIERULFF ELECTRONICS A Ducommun Electronics Group Company An EOE We can CUTit.. We can perm it . . . We can frost or bleach it . . . We can shampoo and set it . . . We can blow dry it . . . We can curl it . . . We also do manicures and pedicures. All at prices that won’t cut into your budget. $475 Haircuts \ar^e§) Sues School of Hair Design 822-7579 1711 Briarcrest Drive, Bryan Hours: Monday 12:45-5:30 Tuesday-Thursday 9:30-5:30 Friday 8:45-5:30 SP Hi fe pi LANE season b ball Goa dered,“I says, wh; son and j Now tl have pro losing a John’s at day, Th snapping streaR les “Losin thing,” s; won the “Pressun because tomed to effect it’s The f in the Bi son, hav the tougl both Bos in overt Hoyas w time. If the Georgetc free-thrt stands at hitting 01 men. After 12:04 rt the dellc throw v\ dearly, f and-one ing blew Micha< throws la A free Mullin w the mar£ Redmen’: The la before S; 71, also February usual thi Carnesec The tv^ ison Squr