The Battalion. (College Station, Tex.) 1893-current, February 13, 1985, Image 7

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    Wednesday, February 13,1985/The Battalion/Page 7
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Warped
by Scott McCullar
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Just In Time
... so&wail
Photo by MELISSA ADAIR
Shirley Johnson looks as a College Station
firefighter extinguishes the flames from her
car. Johnson left her car running when she
went into the Nash’s Food Store on Long-
mire Street in south College Station at about
10:00 a.m. Tuesday.
Miss A&M
Pageanfs promotion activities begin with kiss
iTUmlM*
KtiwW ID —
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jfCitiztfti' I
ton Coni;
rch2 wk By ROBIN ROBERTSON
several Ot Reporter
The Miss Texas A&M University
Scholarship Pageant sponsors are
busy promoting the sixth annual
eant.
'he pageant, which is sponsored
by the Memorial Student Center
Hospitality Committee, will deter-
>wi*»»_mine the University’s representative
in the Miss Texas pageant this sum
mer in Fort Worth.
Christy Tally, production promo
tional manager, says more emphasis
has been placed on promotion for
this year’s pageant.
WwrtWI One promotion is a kissing booth
a t p os t Oak Mall from 1 p.m. to 5
p.m. Thursday. For a donation, the
fkmXi' 20 contestants will draw lips on the
GOLM donor’s face instead of giving kisses.
JHaim Also pageant contestants will give
a talent preview for the contestants
Friday from 7 p.m. to 9 p.m. at Post
Oak Mall.
Pi
fashion show Feb. 19 in the MSC,
and a talent preview is scheduled for
Feb. 21 at noon in the MSC.
Another promotion is the Mr. Ag
gie contest Feb. 20 at noon in the
MSC. Kim Walters, Miss Texas
A&M 1984, will be mistress of cere
monies.
“This year the 12 contestants, in
cluding football players and yell
leaders, will write biographies on
themselves,” Tdlly said. “The event
is fun and humorous.”
The Miss Texas A&M Scholarship
Pageant will be Feb. 23 at 7 p.m. in
Rudder Auditorium.
“Fifty percent of the Miss Texas
A&M Scholarship Pageant is talent,”
Tally said. “The other 50 percent is
composed of an interview, swimsuit
competition, poise and beauty.”
Gina Chesak, executive director
for the pageant, said the winner will
receive a $1,000 scholarship to Texas
A&M, a $1,000 wardrobe allowance
for the Miss Texas Pageant, a 14 ka
rat gold diamond pendant valued at
$3,000 to wear for the year and use
of a 1984 Cadillac sedan.
Sheri Ryman, a former Miss
Texas A&M and Miss Texas, will
host the pageant, which will feature
The Aggieland Orchestra and the
Singing Cadets. The theme for the
pageant is “A Night in the South.”
Tickets are available at $4 tor stu
dents and $7 for non-students at the
MSC Box Office.
AN
ITexas businessmen named
iin securities fraud lawsuit
0 ■
Associated Press
^ , 1 j DALLAS — Two Texas business-
,, men have been named by the Securi-
^ ties and Exchange Commission in
$ lawsuit alleging securities fraud that
involves $10 million worth of stock
oi-bv ^ traded at brokerage firms in four
states.
j# “This is a nationwide scheme,”
■gi Hugo Wright, enforcement officer
for the Fort Worth office of the SEC
told The Dallas Morning News.
Two Dallas offices of the broker-
,, age firms Dean Witter Reynolds Inc.
and E.F. Hutton & Co. may have
'fit ‘Suffered losses as a result of the de-
.—^ fehdants’ actions, according to the
D 0 1 SEC suit. .
The Fort Worth and New York
offices of the SEC filed a civil lawsuit
Monday against five businessmen in
the case.
The complaint, filed in U.S. Dis
trict Court for the Southern District
of New York, named the following
defendants: Thomas W. Reid of
Grandview, a businessman and pri
vate investor; Maurice Rind of Los
Angeles, a businessman and former
stockbroker; and B&M Investments
Inc., a Texas corporation of which
Rind is president.
Reid’s attorney Marty Caplan in
New York said “I can tell you that
Mr. Reid denies the allegations
against him.”
A secretary in Rogers’ office said
he was “not reachable” and the other
defendants could not be reached.
The suit says that since January
1983, the defendants “engaged in a
scheme to defraud broker-dealers
across the nation by purchasing se
curities of First City Properties Inc.
(of Beverly Hills), among other com
panies, without intending to make
payment, a practice known as ‘free
riding.’ ”
The suit says the defendants
bought $10 million worth of stock
from a number of brokerage firms,
including Dean Witter Reynolds and
E.F. Hutton.
The defendants, according to the
suit, either “failed completely to pay
on a timely basis or failed to deposit
the required margin into their ac
counts.”
Actual losses to the brokerage
firms when they were forced to sell
the securities amounted to more
than $500,000, the complaint says.
- —" - - I ...n.,. in i ' ■'
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Martel's 2 DAYS ONLY Coupon!
BLUE BELL
ICE CREAM
M MM Wi|
. ' i
!
Good Feb. 13 & 14 only with
this coupon. Limit one with
every $20.00 purchase. Not
good with any other offer.
^ GAL. ALL RIMS
DN\CE\)C'EA4
ATESCRES
Thurs - Sat. 10-6
Shiloh Place
College Station
764-318 7
Cap & Gown is pleased to announce
the 1984-85 Preferred Professors
[
Dr. Curtis Lard
Dr. Billy Huddleston
These professors have been chosen
senior based on their scholarship,
leadership, and service to Texas A&M.
National Mortar Board Week Feb. 11-15
the big hiss
KYLE FIELD
jf
February" 14 S : 30 pm
GC
TEX
vt
TUDENT
ERNMENT
«■ M L N I V E RS I T Y
Tickets on sale
-MSC
-Commons
- S b i s a
-Quad
-All area 7-11's
ICICYS^
PM 105
$10.00 per couple Benefiting MDA.
Kiss Kit: 2 Big Kiss T-Shirts, 2 valuable sets of
Valentine coupons, and other kissing accessories.
s/a
TELLUR/DE
Spring Break
March 10-16
$249
Includes:
Round trip bus transportation
4 nights lodging
3 day lift tickets
Lots more
March 10-15
$509 includes:
Roundtrip Airfare
5 nights lodging
Carnegie Hall performance
City tour/famous landmarks
Deadline Feb. 21
MSC Travel
845-1515
MSC 216
Student Programs Office