FREE Locator Will help you find that Apartment#Duplex#Condo Call 24 hrs. 7 days 846-6961 S N s S a x n » Let’s Party Tonight!! k Page 6/The Battalion/Thursday, April 25,1985 Week! THE BOOT BARN The Largest Selection and Lowest Prices in The Brazos Valley Ropers, Exotics, Cowhides, Bullhides Wrangler Jeans and Shirts Silver Laced Belts HOURS: M-SAT. 9:30-6 2.5 miles east of the Brazos Center on FM 1179 (Briarcrest Dr.) In Bryan, Tx. 822-0247 liiwiiii What’s up Thursday MSC LOST Sc FOUND: will hold un auction in the MSC lounge IQa.m.-l p.m. Cash only. MSC'CEPHEID VARIABLE: will show “Prince Valiant”at 7:30 p.m. and 9:45 p.m. in 701 Rudder. Cost is$l. PHI KAPPA PHI: initiates should pick up banquet ticketsbe- f ore tomorrow in 205 Reed Mc Donald. The banquet will be held on April 30 at 6:30 p.m. in 226 MSC. Call Shirley Bo- vey at 845-2858 it you have questions. PRE-LAW SOCIETY: will hold their banquet at Cenare’sat 6:30 p.m. All members are welcome. STUDENT ORGANIZATION OFFICER WORKSHOP: will hold its initial session 7 p.m.-10 p.m. in 201 Rudder. Dean Mobley will speak. SWAMP: will meet at Rudder Fountain 11 a.m.-2 p.nuo stage a coup to overthrow the Board of Regents and stu dent government. Friday A&M GARDEN CLUB: will hold its annual Flower Show at the College Station Community Center at 1300 jersey. Tbe public is invited from 3 p.m.-5:30 p.m. ARUNGTON, CORPUS CHRISTI, H-E-B, Sc PLANO HOMETOWN CLUBS: will have an end-of-the-yearparty at Q-hut A from 9 pan.-1 a.in. REGIONAL STUDIES CLUB: will present “The River" from noon-12:50 p.m. in 134 Civil Eng. Bldg. Bring a bag lunch. UNITED CAMPUS MINISTRY: will meet at 6:15 p.m. at A&M Presbyterian Church for Bible study. 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. Pamphlet offers advice on coping with finals stress The St TAMU r« vide the o knowledge will be the | dents, vice advisers. T of recognii in 201 Rud By TAMARA BELL Staff Writer you are doing w For many students finals week is synonymous with stress. To help stu dents who experience end-of-the-se- • Imai best on looking over the test and you writing down the answers. lagimng i the exam. Imagine; experience mester anxiety, the Student Coun seling Service and the Department of Student Affairs have co-produced a pamphlet that will guide the stu dent through this difficult time. “The concept to publish a pamph let began last year, says Becky Sib ley, a counselor for off-campus stu dents. “We published about 2,000 copies with information that in structs a student on how to prepare for exams, among other nerve calm ing suggestions.” • Spending your energy on ik exam and not your fear. This about the work not the worry. • Respecting your right answen • Preparing carefully. Avo cramming. Be sure you know*! the exam will cover and thetypt test it will be. The pamphlet also suggests , ■ to deal with roommateConflictsili . 01 : curient 'l tend to rise during finals week9 ley says. The pamphlet is mainly for stu dents who won’t go to counselors, Sibley says. It’s tangible and can be read over again. According to the pamphlet, exam nerves can be dealt with by: Although the pamphlet r v... proven stress skills, Sibley says, doesn’t provide in-depth counsel® If a student finds school« stressful, Sibley recommendstkli ^ • Realizing that exam nerves are common and beneficial, they can motivate you. see a counselor. u lf , ^ Pamphlets are availabe at M ^amjde^fSe 5 ds predecesso dent Programs Office in the Me® rial Student Center now, and will in the Student Affairs Office, in ik YMCA Building, next week. Judge Sara Hughes, who swore in LBJ, dies Any ju viously tak do so toniy for a degr strate an a Students ii and Physic than April Stuck 1 /■ Interest now for a cl Dance, Sen tion, and C secretary’s will be Apri plication is i Womei The Te Concert in the MSC bi 53.50. Fort Facu/1} M By KIR St The Faculty resentative of l should not take the speaker, s Milford, wh xpires at the ing, has decide w ™'X)sition again en.Jaan Laan istry, has filed lay meeting. F nlyone term. “I think I f< ien se he felt, tf ftould be repr tdty," he says. personality dth an individt He says tha Associated Press DALLAS — Sarah T. Hughes, the federal judge who swore in Lyndon B. Johnson after the assassination of President Je>hn F. Kennedy, was re- N te>ugh. membered Wednesday as a distinguished jurist. Hughes died late Tuesday at Pres byterian Hospital. She was 88. “It was the greatest sadness to learn of Judge Hughes’ death,” for mer first lady Lady Bird Johnson said. “I have known and admired her since my university days in the ’30s when she was a young Texas legislator.” ew “Lyndon and I enjoyed her friendship and were so proud of her and the service she gave to Texas,” Johnson said. When Kennedy was assassinated, Johnson called for Hughes to give him the oath of office. The hastily assembled ceremony took place at Dallas Love Field aboard Air Force One as Jacqueline Kennedy, in a blood-splattered suit, stood by John son. - “Incidently she made the nf ruling in that case; I won." Another 5th Circuit judge, jc |i S. Williams, called Hughes out the most distinguished trialjiidjB 1 | the nation. “While she was obviously 1 Asso< oneer among women as judges*' AUSTIN lawyers, we thought of her ntd lass and ~~ those terms but simply As r" ingly competent judge,” said. U.S. Rep. Martin Frosi, ™ ^ served as a law clerk for Hughes^ a ° 1970 and 1971, called her an« murders traordinary woman” who“kne»^ I <)l issues and knew the law betterllj r an exctd ana ser mes are ,' as s ‘gned inu tal, JLAark Whi almost any attorney who app in her court.” Hughes was tough on busil* , P oriented crimes, FTost recalled. | There were a lot of white-* criminals who went to jail becansd 11 M Sarah Hughes,” said Frost,D-Tes* Stuc Lois Swan Jones, an aide to Hughes, said she felt the judge also would like to be remembered for more than just the historic cere mony. “I’m sure she’d like to be remem bered for swearing in Lyndon John son, but she’d also like to be remem bered for some of her good judicial decisions,” Jones said. Hughes was an outspoken crat and a controversial fig Dallas, where her rulings *' widely criticized by local offic® 1 —r being too liberal. BJtaveling o She was defeated twice in elett® nier, they t tries, once in 1946 when she ran L n< “d castles B yMlCHAI Sta [When most o Congress and once in 1958 when! soug Court grcs [ht a seat on the Texas Suptt . n