Image provided by: Texas A&M University
About The Battalion. (College Station, Tex.) 1893-current | View Entire Issue (May 21, 1986)
Page 8/The Battalion/Wednesday, May 21, 1986 Registration starts Friday, June 13, at theatres everywhere. A PAPER CLIP Production An ALAN METIER Film RODNEY DANGERFIELD “BACK TO SCHOOL" SALLY KELLERMAN BURT YOUNG KEITH GORDON ADRIENNE BARBEAU ROBERT DOWNEY, JR. SAM KINISON and NED BEATTY as Dean Martin Music byDANNY ELFMAN Executive Producers ESTELLE ENDLER MICHAEL ENDLER HAROLD RAIS Produced byCHUCK RUSSELL Screenplay by STEVEN KAMPMANN & WILL PORTER and PETER TOROKVEI & HAROLD RAIS stoiy byRODNEY DANGERFIELD & GREG FIELDS <s DENNIS SNEE Directed by ALAN METIER Color by DoLmo An ORSOM "pictures Release © 1986 Oriwi Pictures Cotporadoo. All R$its ResenwL PG-131 PARENTS STRONGLY CAUTIONED <@< SOUNDTRACK ALBUM AVAILABLE ON Some Material May Be Inappropriate for Children Under 13 MCA RECORDS AND CASSETTES. How to buy a performance You can use the American Express® Card to buy concert tickets for your favorite groups or airplane tickets for your vaca tions. It’s the perfect way to pay for all the little things, and the big-ticket items, that you’ll want during college. How to get the Card before you graduate. Because we believe college is the first sign of success, we’ve made it easier for you to get the American Express Card. Graduating students can get the Card as soon as they accept a $10,000 career-oriented job. If you’re not graduating yet, you can apply for a special sponsored Card. Look for student applications on campus. Or call 1-800-THE-CARD, and tell them you want a student application. The American Express Card. Don’t leave school without it: SM TRAVEL REIATED SERVICES Waldo by Kevin Thou: HOWDY/ S/ACE MOST of THE STUDEUrs ME GONE right now, i'd like to SAY A FEW WORDS TO AU. YOU ADMINISTRATORS AND STAFF MEMBERS/ THIS IS DON POWEU, THE DIRECTOR OF. BUSINESS SERVICES ADMINISTRATION. W£ NEED to congratulate HIM FOR EARNING HIS PhD' LARRY RlMTEft HERE WAS MY STATISTICS PROF LAST FALl! HE HAS JUST BEEN ELECTED AS THE NEW MAYOR OF COLLEGE STATION! SOON HE WILL LEARN THE PROBABILITY THIS IS GUIDO Fmvtj FISCAL OFFICE. HE'S to VERY UNDERSTANDING F» v PAST va WEEKS WHILE hi; FEE PAYMENT CHECK MS THE MAIL... " Senate votes to lengthen daylight-saving time in 198 WASHINGTON (AP) — The Senate voted Tuesday to begin na tional daylight-saving time on the first Monday in April, with support ers exalting the extension as saving energy, preventing traffic accidents and providing more recreation time. all of April in daylight-savings time, but also would add a week in the fall so that children taking part in Hal loween trick-or-treating could do so in daylight. The Senate approved the plan by voice vote after defeating, on a vote of 58-36, a bid to table and thus kill the measure. The bill which would extend day light-saving time by three weeks goes back to the House, which last fall ap proved a more ambitious plan. The House plan would not only include The daylight-saving time exten sion plan is an emotional issue in some states, and Sen. Wendell Ford, D-Ky., said he would have launched a filibuster had the legislation before the Senate included the one-week Halloween extension. Even so, Ford told the Senate that extending daylight-saving time through all of April will force many children, especially those who live in the western reaches of times go to school in total darkne increasing risks they will fal to accidents or crime. Sen. Slade Gorton, R-K, principal advocate of extendir light-saving time, said hew lied with the three extra w April. Gorton promised thathe* pose House attempts to add loween extension. Andhepn that House members likelr along with that in the House conference that will be held solve dif ferences between if plans. ■ WASH Jggest e: i decades, to open tl yearning ■nited St announce I The praised tl step” and 36 of 12 ■nited 8 Kremlin 1 I State ■harles E the decisi States Me ol an ot man righ zei land. ■ He saie of names emigrate leave the Trip (continued from page 1) ic the trip, but others said lobbyists picked up their tabs. Sen. Roy Blake, D-Nacogdoches, said special-interest groups co-spon sored the affair by helping finance the round-trip air fare, the $115- per-night rooms at the Sheraton PGA Resort and nightly activities. The trip was criticized by a public- interest lobby promoting ethics in government. “All these legislators should be ashamed of themselves,” said John Hildreth, executive director of Com mon Cause of Texas. “This is not the kind of conduct the public expects out of them. It’s totally inappropria te.” According to the Times Herald, lawmakers who participated in the four-day trip were: Blake; Caperton; Sen. Chet Ed wards, D-Duncanville; Sen. Bob Mc Farland, R-Arlington; Sen. J.E. Sen. Bob Glasgow, D-Stephenville; Rep. Clint Hackney, D-Houston; Rep. Ashley Smith, R-Houston; Rep. Mike Millsap, D-Fort Worth, and Rep. Bill Messer, D-Belton. Two of the six senators who par ticipated in the excursion said they were not lobbied during the vaca tion. Two other senators confirmed that they were approached by lobby ists on the tort reform and nursing home issues, the newspaper re ported. Caperton said, “It was one of those things you just have to make a gut decision on and check with your self and make sure you’re not going to be influenced by the entertain ment or whatever.” lape V li£ very light way” on revisions in the state’s civil liability laws, but added, “I know I’m going to make indepe- dent decisions on the issues. Playboy suinf. U.S. Attorney General Me. LOS ANGELES (AP)-f| hoy Enterprises Inc. issuitjlj Attorney General Edwin If and his Commission on Pout raphy, accusing them ofadJ censor and suppress disirbl of Playboy magazine throid blacklist. paperuoi Becks, i Redm; names oi State Dej ol trying tne Unite U In add Soviets h cither cas ■fa U.S. person vv I These tp U.S. ai ■ “The America! See The American Booksdleitl sociation and the Counciloni odical Distributors Assotiaf joined in the lawsuit filedfii in U.S. District Court fortiitl ti ict of Columbia. The lawsuit accuses the ( mission of sending letten bookstores and major drug convenience store chains in ruary, notifying them they been identified as vendors or tributors of pornography. ONLY A HOB SKIP AND AWAY FROM A NEW LOAN BY LAMAR! ■rove ■Vars” to fll s a r Your kids borrowed the car— See Lamar and become a two-car family! ••'fr Think how good you'll See Lamar for look in a new 11% interest carl Move rate on new ahead one car loans. space. You got a great new car loan from Lamar—take an extra turnl ISilillll ■111 Your old clunker finally j crateredl j Move bad two space ill > ' v I Hit the road in your new motorhomel Roll again. c You financed your new boat with Lamar! Roll againl 11% INTEREST Summertime— and you still don't have a boat? Lamar can help! Lamar's 11% interest rate is great on your new car loan! Roll again! You're a winner with Lamar! ® Registered trademark or Lamar Savings. SMServiceMark of Lamar Savings Association. Ail loans subject to Lamar's underwriting approval. We have loans that help you enjoy the good things in life— like a new car, boat, camper or motorhome. See us for a great interest rate on those things that make life worth living! Call the Lamar Savings branch nearest you. TF o c "' 1 L/dinar Savings A--' MEMBER FSLIC C_V The Future Belongs to the Pioneer 24II Texas Avenue S. College Station, Texas 77840 409/696-2800 Rates good through May 31, 1986. Maximum term for a car loan is 48 months. 200 Southwest Parkway College Station, Texas 77840 409/693-7410