ceiline:, and recently, in re- turned down because his £rade Meridian. says. Page lO/The Battalion/Monday, April 7, 1986 ■a Warped by Scott McCullar Fire AH.HA! FINISHED! I’ve VON£ IT. I'VE REPLACED THE CREATURE’S BRAIN. NOW HE'LL BE TWICE AS INTELLIGENT- WHAT A BREAKTHROUGH! WHAT A... OH, YOU’RE AWAKE,GOOD. 1TUST OPERATED ON YOU AND GAVE YOU A NEW BRAIN. YOU'RE BETTER THAN NEW! WELL, I'LL JUST GO TERRORIZE THE COUNTT/i SIDE, THEN. WHAT? WHAT ARE YOU TALKING ABOUT? X JUST OPERATED ON YOO.TOU CANT GO RUNNING OFF? OH, RIGHT. THANKS FOR. RE-niNPING ME... (continued from page 1) Waldo by Kevin Thonnas OUR ePfSOOE TODAY CONSISTS OF A NORMAL TEXAS A+M STUDENT HAVING A NORMAL DAY ON A COMPUTER SYSTEM AFFECTIONATELY KNOWN AS WYLBUR... HE THINKS TO himself.. YOU KNOW IT'S GONNA BE A BAD DAY WHEN ROD SERUNG NARRATES YOUR EVERY Move... o„ HEC ret iMDI begin relocating residents in empty apartments tomorrow. She also said the owners of the apartments, James Point manage ment, would be willing to transfer leases. Anders said the complex will not reimburse uninsured residents for lost belongings. For the residents who managed to get belongings out, Anders said va cant apartments will be used for storage. He said the complex was accept ing clothing donations in the Sausa- lito clubhouse. Around 10 p.m., local radio sta tions began broadcasting pleas for clothes for the homeless residents. The Red Cross set up a shelter at Aggieland Inn for cash and clothes donations. Humphreys said the situation was reported “under control” at 8:48 p.m. Around 8:45 p.m., residents in other buildings that had anticipated the Fire spreading, began moving their possessions back in. Humphreys said several fire de partment units will remain on the scene throughout the night. Investigator George Spain of the fire marshal’s office sifts through the rubble of a burned unit of the Sausalito Apartments at dawn this morning. The fire’s cause has yet to be determined. Bomb cc (continued from page 1) 100-member commission of West Berlin and American military police. Manfred Ganschow, director of West Berlin security police, said Sunday that three separate claims of responsibility telephoned the day of the explosion to news agencies in London and Berlin “cannot be con sidered authentic.” The Berliner Morgenpost daily newspaper said investigators were focusing on anti-Western Arab mili tants in West Berlin. It quoted unidentified West Ber lin security officials as saying the Li byan Embassy in East Berlin, the capital of East Germany, could have served as headquarters for the bombers. The Morgenpost quoted Gans chow as saying intelligence reports indicated “fanatical Arabs operating independently of one another” had slipped into West Berlin recently. Ganschow told a news conference that investigators continued to zero in on leftist and foreign terrorist groups, but “no concrete clues” sur faced to identify the bombers. In Bonn, the West German capi tal, Foreign Minister Hans-Dietrich Genscher established a working group of experts to see if foreign governments, not identified, could have been involved in the disco bombing. Steven Stromvall, spokesman for the U.S. military’s Berlin Brigade, said 18 Americans injured in the ex plosion remained hospitalized Sun day for burns and other injuries. March (continued from page 1) ment as a method to pressure the government. After Muraya spoke, the demon strators marched from the College Station City Hall to Rudder Tower where they chanted “I, you, we all say: Apartheid must go and the time is today.” At Rudder, David Ellis, president of Students Working Against Many Problems, told demonstrators that the United States can’t ignore prob lems in other nations. “It’s a world community,” he said, “and South Africa is holding back human resources that will affect us. “We have to tell our congressmen to quit supporting South Africa. We have to tell our companies to quit supporting South Africa.” Thirty million people live in South Africa — 70 percent black, 17 percent white, 9 percent mixed and 3 percent Asian. puter sales and the sale of kruger rands in the United States. Dr. Larry Yarak, an A&M history professor, labeled apartheid a “monstrous system.” “It’s a police state armed to the teeth to protect white privilege,” he said. But in South Africa, Yarak said, 13 percent of the land is for 70 per cent of the people, which makes the blacks aliens in their own land. Yarak also addressed the Reagan administration and its actions re garding South Africa. “But,” Yarak said, “the adminis tration was not acting out of moral indignation — it was acting from constituent’s pressure.” Yarak said people should support the blacks in Africa and demand to tal U.S. divestment. In September, the administration banned loans to South Africa, com- “This would send and unmista- keable message to the ruling white minority,” he said. Congress to consider firearm, tax legislation! WASHINGTON (AP) — Con gress returns from its Easter re cess this week with the House re ady to take up firearms legislation that has put the National Rifle Association and police organiza tions at opposite ends of the bar rel. The Senate Finance Commit tee will resume its work on a tax overhaul bill, while on the Senate floor debate continues on whether to sell Washington’s two federal airports to a local author ity. The House reconvenes Tues day to consider some non-contro- versial bills, including one nam ing a fellowship program after Christa McAuliffe, the New Hampshire teacher who died in the Challenger explosion. Then, on Wednesday, the rep resentatives are scheduled to de bate and decide between compet ing versions of legislation to alter the 1968 Gun Control Act. A bill sponsored by Rep. Har old L. Volkmer, D-Mo, and sup-1 ported by the NRA is similar to | Senate-passed legislation, would permit interstate sale and I transportation of handguns, ri-1 lies and shotguns. Police organizations and[ House Democratic leaders sup-1 port a rival bill allowing interstate transportation and sales of I guns — but not handguns. Tire | bill drafted by the House Judi ciary Committee would alb | sales of rifles and shotguns ! dealers in one state to sportsmen ] from another state, so long as the gun law s of both states are fol- j lowed. The committee bill would re- i quire that police records of buy ers be checked following a sale, not the case in the Volkmer bill. MCDONALD’S INTRAMURAL HIGHLIGHTS m jMCDon