The Battalion. (College Station, Tex.) 1893-current, June 26, 1985, Image 3

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FARMERS MARKET
Wednesday, June 26, 1985/The Battalion/Page 3
0*1*ATE? ANT\ V
' ◄UP- m mm A Mm* Jc ml AiSi*PfmmiMmJr
■ .
announces the following
Po-Boy
Sandwich,
your choice
of chips
&
medium drink
only 51.99 plus tax (limit 2/coupon)
w/ this coupon... $2.89 value
offer valid until July 14
Security tightened
at larger airports
in Houston, Dallas
If you’re in cramped quarters ...
Make your move to
Sevilla
from $315 IBd IBa
* 3 Blks from campus
* spacious floor plans
* laundry room
* on Shuttle Bus
* Large closets
* pool
1501 Holleman #33 693-2108
College Station
Associated Press
DALLAS — Dallas-Fort Worth
International Airport and Houston
Intercontinental are tightening secu
rity following recent terrorist inci
dents involving commercial airlin
ers, officials with the two facilities
say.
Rep. Dan Glickman, D-Kan., on
Monday asked the Federal Aviation
Adminstration to examine security
at all U.S. airports, especially those
such as the Dallas-Fort Worth and
Houston facilities, which have ex
panded international service.
Dallas-Fort Worth and Houston
Intercontinental are Texas’ two larg
est airports.
American Airlines officials at Dal
las-Fort Worth said armed guards
have been assigned to service entries
that previously were covered by an
intercom system. Also, freight from
Europe is being delayed for one or
two days, officials said.
In Houston, Intercontinental Air
port manager James Ellingsworth
said security agents are using metal
detectors and X-ray machines to
check items twice as often as the de
vices are usually used.
But airport officials said it is too
soon to begin extreme safety mea
sures such as checking every piece of
luggage by hand or by X-ray.
Joe Dealey, spokesman for the
Dallas-Fort Worth airport, said
checking every hag is expensive and
would halt flight service.
An unnamed FAA spokesman in
Washington told the Dallas Times-
Herald that the agency may require
extreme baggage checks if it deter
mines that passenger safety is at risk.
Travelers at D-FW’s international
terminals said Tuesday that they had
noticed the increase in security and
were pleased.
Karl MuecRe, 66, a Salt Lake City
resident on his way to a European
vacation, said he had coins in his
briefcase as he passed through a se
curity checkpoint.
“I had to open it and they looked
all through it. I was very pleased
they did so,” he said.
Hans Schoem, who was returning
home to Frankfurt, West Germany,
from a vacation in Mexico, said he
thought some of the checks exces
sive, but the inconveniece didn’t
bother him.
wwilQI S.Up
Wednesday
non-students.
STUDENTS AGAINST APARTHEID* is #e«#hg i*> 501
: : Rudder, Information on apartheid will be presented and
• .iv'r there will be a guest speaker,
CHRISTIANS ON CAMPUS: will meet at noon in 305 Rud-
., der for fellowship and Bible study on Christ’s crucifiedon,
resui reedon and attention.
Items for What’s Up should fee submitted to The Battalion,
216 Reed McDonald, no less than three day# prior to de
sired publication date. J
Attorneys ask to have
58 bodies exhumed
Associated Press
GALVESTON — Attorneys de
fending a Houston-based nursing
home corporation and live employ
ees against murder charges have
asked to have the bodies of 58 for
mer patients exhumed so autopsies
can be done.
Two bodies of former patients at
Autumn Hills nursing home in
Texas City were exhumed last
month for autopsies.
Only one autopsy was performed
among the 61 former Autumn Hills
patients who died after allegedly re
ceiving poor care at the nursing
home, defense attorneys said.
State District Judge Don Morgan
said he expects to rule on the request
this week. But he said exhuming so
many bodies would be difficult since
some bodies are buried outside the
county or the state.
The exhumation request is the lat
est twist in the four-year-old case
against the Autumn Hills corpora
tion and several past and current
employees accused of killing elderly
patients through neglect.
Barton backs bill to make
spies face death penalty
Associated Press
WASHINGTON — Freshman
Rep. Joe Barton said Tuesday that
spies should face the death penalty
as “retribution” to society, and that if
they were caught in his Texas dis
trict, the reaction would be “take ’em
out and string ’em up.”
Barton, R-Ennis, appeared at a
news conference with a group of
other members of Congress sup
porting an amendment to the de
fense authorization bill restoring the
death penalty for espionage.
Eldon Rudd, R-Ariz., sponsor of
the amendment, said he expected it
to come up on the floor Tuesday or
Wednesday.
Similar legislation has been intro
duced in both houses of Congress in
the wake of the Walker family spy
case.
John A. Walker Jr., a former
Navy warrant officer, is accused of
being the ringleader of the spy net
work that authorities say included
his brother Arthur, his son Michael
and a close friend, Jerry A. Whit
worth. All have pleaded innocent to
spying charges.
“Where I come from, what we’d
do about it would be take ’em out
and string ’em up,” Barton said,
drawing laughter.
Rudd said he was offering an
amendment on the floor because the
bill he introduced last January, be
fore the Walker case surfaced, has
received no action in committee.
Rep. James Sensenbrenner, R-
Wis., accused the House Judiciary
Committee, of which he is a mem
ber, of “obstructing” death penalty
bills.
“We in Congress were elected to
lead, we were elected to make deci
sions, and that means vote on impor
tant bills rather than shuffling them
away to a committee that never acts
on them,” Sensenbrenner said.
Rep. Robert Dornan, R-Calif,
said: “The only way to get the atten
tion of people who will sell out their
country for a few thousand dollars
because they have a marriage prob
lem, an economic problem, or they
just want to buy a new water-ski
boat, is to have capital punishment
applied.”
White angers
oil marketers
with veto
AUSTIN — The
Marketers Association
day that Gov.
measure that would _
sumers when he vetoed a
would have required
eating how much akol
tot luel.
The association members
market almost SO percent
motor fuel in Texas, s
launch a voluntary
program.
jerdy Cary, associ
dent, said, “We hope our
tary . program
showing the governor he
advised.” -
Oil
m
wM eon-
bill that
indi
in mo-
......iilf
of the
will
volun-
HMi
was ill-
THE BROADWAY BARGAIN:
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BRIGADOON
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MSC Town Hall/Broadway announces the Broadway Bargain — the best deal on a great
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NAME
SEATING PREFERENCE:
CHECK ONE: DNEW ORDER □ RENEWAL
Same Seats / Section Row Seat #'s_
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Explain Seating Preference: 1st Choice.
.Balcony.
TAMU ID #
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APT. #
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Mail order form and payment to: MSC Box Office • TAMU • P.O. Box J-l •
College Station, TX 77844. If you have any questions please call the MSC Box
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WHOLE CHICKEN
$5.55
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512 Villa Maria 822-5277 r 5
1905 Texas Ave.
Coupon expires:
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$1.55
2 pieces of chicken, 1 roll and
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Offer good at these locations:
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705 Texas Ave.
512 Villa Maria
1905 Texas Ave.
Coupon expires:
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822-2819
822-5277
693-1669
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