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About The Battalion. (College Station, Tex.) 1893-current | View Entire Issue (April 4, 1985)
HAVE BOOKS? NEED MONEY? Page 10/The Battalion/Thursday, April 4, 1985 We buy ALL books, including examination copies, paperbacks, out of date textbooks, fiction books, etc. University Book Stores NORTHGATE "OPEM • A.M. CULPEPPER PLAZA 409 UNIVERSITY DR. latT’pm." NEXT TO 3C-BBQ Marines We’re looking for a few good men. Captain M. McGrath 846-8891/9036 DEFENSIVE DRIVING COURSE ' April 2nd & 3rd Ramada Inn Pre-register by Phone: 693-8178 FEE $20 Ticket Deferral and 10% Insurance Discount AD % ^ ’ 85 % *Os e NVe ^ x Applications: 108 YMCA Deadline: APRIL 12 Information sessions: April 4, 7:00pm 308 RUDDER For More Information, Call 845-9635 or 845-5826 Department of Student Affairs THE TEXAS A&M UNIVERSITY SYSTEM Announces The Opening Of THE MICRO ACQUISITION CENTER For the week of March 18-22, the Micro Acquisition Center personnel will be located in the main hallway of the MSC from 9am to 4pm to take orders and answer any questions you might have about the program. Beginning March 25, the microcomputer acquisition program will operate out of its new location in the basement of the MSC (next to the TAMU Bookstore). Orders may be placed between 9am and 4pm Monday through Friday. Please pick up an information packet and read it thoroughly before ordering. This program is brand new; initial services and products will be expanded during the next few months in order to have the program fully operational by September 1, 1985- Texas Instruments Tjfmjth | data i; systems f^cipplG computer ATsT Information Systems t!k ^k l a e p t S Radio /hack , Of*'*'© 0 <H worldapid nmion iPO Funky Winkerbean - FAfAOUS OOrAPOSERS - CHAPTER TEN-CLAUDE BARLOW A5 LUCK WOULD HAVE IT, CLAUDE BARLOW FINALLY HIT THE CHARTB WOW A UOUELIV CHRISrmAE.SOMG FEAH)RIN& HAKiDEL'S ME5EIAH SUNG BA* BARKItiG DOGS/ HE QUICKLY PUT TOGETHER A GROUP TO TOUR EUROPE, OPENING FOR FRAHZ LISZT OM SEVERAL DATES ! by Tom Batiuk SchfOGde to leave HE EVEN) GOT A GUEST SHOT ON SATURDAY NIGHT LIVE’, ALTHOUGH IT WASN'T AS IMPORTANT THEN SINCE THERE WAS NO TELEVISION ! NT hospital Associated Press SHOE by Jeff MacNelly |£T£ 566 IfTUteemo CAN U£U>US eUlLPUP LOUISVIL.LE, Ky. - Artifri heart recipient William Schroedct will be released Saturday from lilt Louisville hospital where he b lived since his Nov. 25 implant,i Humana Inc. spokesman Wednesday. The Jasper, Ind., man will ride it his customized van at 2 p.m. from Humana Hospital Audubon to i transitional apartment across dit street, said Robert Irvine, Huniam 1 nc. director of public relations. The decision was made by imp surgeon William C. DeVries, Irvint said. Schroeder, the second person ever to receive a permanentJarviki heart, has lived longer than anyont with the plastic-and-metaldevice. On March 1(>, he completed! 112th day on the heart, equalingdit time of Barney Clark, the first i plant recipient who died in 1983. Originally, doctors had planned to release Schroeder on Feb. 14,his birthday, but scrapped that planbeB^ a rouii cause of a persistent fever and flu l- like symptoms. ^ A f ter l gf v i, By PE Fourth in Texas A&M chandler h 12-9 victory state Eagles Field. After j urn ] ead after umped all pitcher Bret the fourth t weep of the earn. One of tfn ante was tht ■ntire bullpei 2 loss to the ot into trou JTSU Goad |o bail him on Chandler )f the seasor bird of the laseman Sco he five run same out of r The next f stician’s nig leared their Kirkpatrick changes political parties lead, Powers Associated Press WASHINGTON — Former U.N. Ambassador Jeane Kirkpatrick, say ing she is “tired of swimming against the current of my own party,” changed her voter registration Wednesday from Democrat to Re publican. Hours after her new voter regis tration card was delivered to election officials in suburban Montgomery County, Md., Kirkpatrick told a news conference that she still ad mires her Democratic heroes of the past. “If Harry Truman were running for president today, I would vote for him,” she said, adding that her first vote was cast for Truman in 1948. She said her next vote was for Adlai Stevenson, the Democratic presi dential nominee who lost to Dwight D. Eisenhower in 1952. to the United Nations and devel oped a reputation as an outspoken conservative on foreign policy issues, who frequently disagreed with the State Department position. gan, chairwoman of the GOP Won en's Political Action League. “I can think of no greater pl& sure to me.” added Fahrenkopf. Republicans marked the occasion with a reception in her honor and she was joined at the news confer ence by Maureen Reagan, the presi- Kirkpatrick’s long-heralded switch of party allegiance came after she served four years as the Reagan administration’s chief representative dent’s daughter, and Frank J. Fahr enkopf Jr.,- chairman of the Republican National Committee. “We are very thrilled,” said Rea- During her U.N. career, Kirki trick had well-publicized a agreements with then-Secretan i | State Alexander Haig Jr. over in I.atin America and has been dd scribed by aides to his succesoil George P. Shultz, as opposin tempts to improve relations withtk Soviet Union. lound by I iottage. Sin Christian tra ic Aggies to ig the next I agles" offer ore respect. With a nit lie top of th Head Coach I) send starti Im to the sfi |ever Beje M te game and TUXEDOS • TUXEDOS • TUXEDOS April 12th Deadline for Weekend of April 27th * 10% discount to all students tv/valid ID during April * The music hg the line i Eagles ; seven runs, ii eighth inning of the Ags. \ the side in tl gles’ sand lot After seeii plate in the 1 Field, Johnso I 900 Harvey Rd. College Station, TX 900 Harvey Rd. • Post Oak Village Open 10 a.m.-7 p.m. M-F & 10 a.m.-6 p.m. Sat. The Association of Former Students Spring Senior Induction Banquet Monday & Tuesday, April 8 & 9,1985 6:30 p.m. MSC Room 224 All May & Aug. graduates are invited to attend. Complimentary tickets will be available as long as they last, April 1-5, in the lobby of the Forsyth Alumni Center. This is your invitation to attend the formal induction of all Class of’85 graduates. TICKETS GIVEN ON FIRST COME—FIRST SERVED BASIS