The Battalion. (College Station, Tex.) 1893-current, March 27, 1985, Image 5
'Cultaf - LUCKILY U E DOiV’T HAYE I TO WORU! y IT VERY :e ay ne for partid nale individual led trophies ia divisions at tht jwing the race le to enter tht it will get a T e is $6 per per- and $o on tht can register!)) ible on the first n hall, between today through ion is 7 a.m.to at G. Roi ?alth obstacle for sychotherapist stitute, saidal- vomen usually ■ a traumatic jor factor con- m in middle ause. uded: Rosetta it and Demo irinan; Sally r of Planned y Plapp, a reg- ns investigator the event was director for :cently named ling women in te m lure ress tending the Expo & Ex- like heaven ng on one's tances. • about 2,000 s who toured ; with delica- rich fudge strawberries asenthal had ery, torture," ay, where she ' booth. )f this. All I a chocolate nincide with e fund-raiser ibition center lunteers hop- 0 to build a e Easter bun- s were choco- n, chocolate artist selling traits. it 35 cents to dge. le and Mary ve from the day. n you drive ate,” said Vo- T a square of te. Can’t stay fit.” rSTTILES rORWAIRI 3400 S. COLLEGE AVE. 822-9515 A STRAIGHT FORWARD APPROACH- HAIR CARE AT AFFORDABLE COST! WE GUARANTEE OUR WORK. PAULINE GALVEZ FORMERLY OF FASHIONS BY Tl IREE CONVENIENCE! VIA VILLA MARIA BUSLINE REGISTER FORFREE PERM... HAIRCUT... AND HAIR COLOR! CINDY WOLFE OWNER/OPEl-tATOR HAIRCUTS MEN $9.00 WOMEN $11.00 PERMS $35.00 including cut <s> Thurs. : ■§ March 28 . -A * 7:30 p.m. • ; 'V* THE JACK THE RIPPER HIURDERS. sncriock Holmes Mils me veil or secrecy, corruplion and lerroi ai me neari or me mrone or England itself Clue by dua .murder by murder... * . '' '<>, . . i & .m. 701 Rudderl $1.00 >x< Irom MSC Cepheid Variable Robert A. UolcUton Presents A Film By Bob Clark Starring CHRISTOPHER JAMES PLUMMER MASON DAVID HEMMINGS SUSAN CLARK - ANTHONY QUAYLE JOHN GIELGUD end FRANK FINLAY end DONALD SUTHERLAND ae “The Paychic" Robert Leea DERI m A VALEDICTORY ADDRESS Ladies and gentlemen of the student body; look upon Walden Pond Apartments as both an end and a beginning. An end to living quar ters of lesser distinction. The beginning of a superior lifestyle. Because you’ll enjoy . . . • Privacy • Quiet • Elegance • Convenience • Hot Tub • Pool • Jogging Trails • Exercise and Weight Room • the option of • Furniture • Washers • Dryers . . . And the unexpected bonus of affordability. All this awaits you at Walden Pond. Make it your address now — enrollment is limited. N m Walden Pond Apartments 700 FM 2818 College Station, Texas 77840 A COMPASS MANAGED COMMUNITY (409) 696'5777 “You*ll Love My Dos Gusanos!” Dos Gusanos means — "two worms” -— and it's the name of a new brand of Mezcal [second cousin to Tequila], imported from Mexico. We Promise: Your new Dos Gusanos T-Shirt will help you worm your way into any party! DOS GUSANOS T-SHIRT OFFER! 100% cotton. It's green with red and yellow lettering and logo. Only $4.95. Please send me S M L XL Quantity Dos Gusanos T-Shirts for a total of $ . Send money order or use your MasterCard VISA Acct # Exp Date Name ■ Address : City / State Zip Signature MAIL TO: "Dos Gusanos T-Shirt Offer” 212 500 3rd Avenue West Seattle. WA9B119 Allow 4 to 6 weeks delivery. Offer good in U.S. only. Offer void where prohibited by law. taxed or otherwise restricted by law. No product purchase necessary. Dos Gusanos Mezcal. 80 proof, bottled in Mexico and imported exclusively by David Sherman Corporation. St. Louis. MO 63139. Wednesday, March 27,1985/The Battalion/Page 5 wwilCil S Up Wednesday AGGIE SPELEOLOGICAL SOCIETY:; will meet at 7 p.m. in 507 Rudder to review budget request and plan future . events. AUDIO ENGINEERING GROUP; wilt meet at 7:30 p.m. in I04A Zachry. Guesus welcome. DEL RIO HOMETOWN CLUB; will meet at 7 p.m. in 410 Rudder, ELECTION COMMISSION: is holding the spring general ' elections in the MSC main lounge, A-i Lounge and Pavil ion. Bring vour I.D, card to vote, ENGLISH DEPARTMENT: will present a mini-course on “Where Do the Commas Go?’’at 1 p.m, in 135 Blocker. HISTORY DEPARTMENT: film series presents “Guess".:: Who’s Coming to Dinner?” at 7 p.m. in 100 HECC SPORT PARACHUTE CLUB: will meet at 8:39 p.m. in 701 Rudder. This meeting is an introduction to the sport of skydiving. Anyone interested in making their first jump should attend. TAMU SAILING CLUB; will meet at 7 p.m. in 510 Rudder. Discussion of weekend outing. Everyone welcome TEXAS STUDENT EDUCATION ASSOCIATION: will meet at 7 p.m. in 591 Rudder f or officer nominations. TEXAS SURVEYORS ASSOCIATION: will meet at 7:30 p.m. in 119 CE. Darrell Shine will speak. UNITED CAMPUS MINISTRY: will meet 6 p.m.-7:20 at A&M Presbyterian Church. i Thursday CEPHEID VARIABLE; will show “Murder by Decree” at 7:30 p.m. and 10 p.m. in 701 Rudder. Cost is £1.50. ENGLISH DEPARTMENT; will present, a mini-course on “Where Do the Commas Go?” at 1 p.m. in 135 Blocker. • STUDENT ‘Y\‘ will meet at 7 p.m, in 510 Rudder. TOMBALL HOMETOWN CLUB: will meet at 7 p.m. in 501 Rudder. Gall 290-4083 for more information. YOUNG DEMOCRATS: will meet at 8:30 p.m. in 410 Rud- •/ der. - Items for What’s Up should be submitted to The Battalion* 216 Reed McDonald* no less than three days prior to de sired publication date. Father fighting for unborn child Associated Press SAN ANTONIO — Keith Hayes may be estranged from his wife of only a few months, but he still wants a say in whether she has an abortion. The San Antonio man has won the first round in his battle. He per suaded State District Judge James Onion to impose a temporary re straining order barring Kim Kyla Hayes from getting an abortion until a hearing can be held. The second round is Wednesday when that hearing is scheduled in Onion’s courtroom. , The case promises to be a classic confrontation between pro- and anti-abortionists, whose representa tives have promised to show up. But. the case also should provide a legal forum on the issue of a father’s rights on abortion, attorneys say. “A father — especially during the stage of pregnancy this lady is in — should have some say-so in whether his child is aborted,” said Dave Rog ers, Hayes’ attorney. “Once the child is dead, the issue is dead with it.” But Gerry Goldstein, a Texas Civil Liberties Union attorney represent ing Mrs. Hayes, said the courts al ready have addressed the issue. “The Supreme Court on more than one occasion has said since it is the wife that must bear the burden of the pregnancy, the final decision should be with the wife,” he said. In this case, the final decision will rest with Onion, who said several constitutional issues likely will be aired during the hearing. “This is something new,” Onion said last week after issuing the tem porary restraining order. “I’ve never seen or heard of this kind of thing happening before.” Onion said he could issue a tem porary injunction halting an abor tion indefinitely. Or he could refuse to do so, clearing the way for Mrs. Hayes to terminate the pregnancy. Hayes and his estranged wife, according to a petition filed last week, married Oct. 16. The docu ment claims the woman became pre gnant shortly thereafter. The couple separated Jan. 28 and the woman told her husband of her plans to abort the pregnancy, the pe tition says. “What Mr. Hayes is saying is he should be considered also,” Rogers said. “She didn’t make that baby by herself.” In the landmark 1973 case in which the Supreme Court ruled abortions legal, the high court was careful not to weigh the father’s rights, Rogers said. But Goldstein said the Supreme Court, a few years after the abortion ruling, struck down a state law re quiring a husband’s consent before an abortion could be performed. “The American Civil Liberties Union is very concerned about the constitutional issues that arise when a husband seeks to interfere with a woman’s right to decide to terminate her pregnancy,” he said. The judge’s restraining order shocked Pat Smothers, spokeswo man for the Texas Abortion Rights League. “I cannot imagine another judge upholding something like this,” Smothers said. But Marie Hernandes, board member of the local Right to Life Foundation, said her group is hop ing and praying something good will come of it. “We are, of course, glad that someone like him has the courage to finally stand up and have the fa thers’ view publicized,” she said. Proposals would raise TDC1986-87 funding Associated Press AUSTIN — Senate budget writ ers considered two proposals Tues day to increase 1986-87 spending for the Texas Department of Cor rections in hopes of prompting a quick settlement of the pending prison reform lawsuit. Prison board officials have re quested $1.9 billion from the Legis lature. One of the funding proposals considered Tuesday was a revised recommendation from the Legis lative Budget Board, which is made up of top legislative leaders. It to taled $717 million, $96 million more than the board’s original recommen dation. The second proposal, by Sen. Ray Farabee, D-Wichita Falls, would pro vide the TDC with $932.4 million, $215.4 million more than the LBB’s recommendation. The Texas prison board met in executive session Monday and ap proved the settlement of a 12-year- old lawsuit in which a group of pris oners claimed there was overcrowd ing and mistreatment of prisoners in the state system. But Chairman Robert Gunn warned the settlement would not come off without additional finan cial backing from the Legislature. “We think this increase will ad dress the issues in the court case and also some of the other priority items as identified by the TDC,” Larry Kopp of the Legislative Budget Board staff told the Senate Finance Committee on Tuesday. Jim Arnold of the LBB said his staffs latest recommendation would provide the prison system with an additional 3,000 correctional offi cers for the 27 state prison units. It also calls for an increase of $50.5 million the next two years for additional health services and psy chiatric care to supplement court- approved plans, Arnold said. Just Arrived Honda Scooters Aero 50 .648 00 Spree 488 00 Aero 80 848 00 A breeze to ride with push-button starting, no shifting and easy-to- operate controls. Twin City Honda 903 S. Main Bryan 823-0545 DISCOVER THE ADVANTAGES OF SHARP, CLEAR 35mm PICTURE-TAKING WITH THE YUNON YN-300, ONLY $19.95! Yunon’s YN-300 is a versatile, compact 35mm camera designed to capture life as it happens without the complex ity usually associated with 35mm photography. Consider the simplicity of its unique aperture ring. While you adjust the exposure setting according to color-coded weather sym bols, the F-stop number is automatically selected for you. And to make picture-taking even more simple and reli able, the YN- 300 delivers crisp pictures every time without the need for manual focusing. 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At only $19.95. or $30.95 with the Yunon YN-14 Electronic Flash Unit, the YN-300 includes all these fine features: *Tripod Mount * Leatherette Carrying Case * Full-Length Shoulder Strap * Protective Lens Cap * Hot-Shoe Flash Contact * Automatic Exposure Counter Send your order to: JAMAR ENTERPRISES 2606 Princeton Drive Austin, Texas 78741 YN-300 35mm camera YN-14 Electronic Flash Shipping & Handling Final Total Name „„ Addie s - ORDER FORM Payment by money order or cashiers check will guar antee immediate shipment. Please allow personal checks 14 days to dear. 30 Day Full Money-Back Guarantee. Quantity Total $19.95 x =$ $11.00 x »■ $ «$ . : ’ - $ City. .State. -Zip. Get valuable savings bonds—during the Uniroyal Free Savings Bond OHer! Free $50 or $100 U.S. Savings Bond sent to you direct from Uniroyal when you buy selected top-quality Uniroyal tires! SAVINGS BOND WITH PURCHASE OF SELECTED UNIROYAL TIRES $ lttl ^ ROYAL SKAL Puncrur«-S«aling Rodiali Nms wM f§ sgs tiger paw plus jfcyVfA .fejr-v-Q- Alt-S«t»»on Radiol WhitawalL W^mr MHPGI 3S larido s/r ^ cMifiiifvt BOND ALL-stason SAVINGS BOND SAVINGS BOliU ALL-TERRAIN w , th porch a.« of two tiro. with purchas. of four t.ro. ^ Truck RadiaU .l.UAAiL.UiUilt j'ALL-SEASON RADIALSi\i l U5( 1 ( 1 (,U,l l l l i.,au,!. UNI ROYAL| s m. SAVINGS BOND with purchaso of four tiros . £5 TIOER PAW PLUS Ati-Sooson Radial Whitewalls t-£l£53Sft1!3 UNIROYAL NOW *29* EASTRAK BELTED VmiTEWkU SIZE Pi75/80613 P195/75B14 m.. 5814 15/75814 P215/75815 34.69 36.56 36-93 40.32 40.97 FRONT-END ALIGNMENT and TIRE ROTATION k SPECIAL Reg. $30.95 now *20** with this coupon We'il check and adjust caster, cam ber, and toe-in to factory specifica tions and perform front-end com ponents safety check. Plus, we ll rotate all four tires, perform tire safety check, and road-test your vehicle. Most cars and light trucks. Program runs March 18 - April 13, 1985. TIRE & AUTO CENTER 400 E. University Dr. 696-1729