The Battalion. (College Station, Tex.) 1893-current, November 05, 1986, Image 4

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SCHU5MAN THEATRES
aMHBB
2.50 ADMISSION
Any Show Before 3 PM
Tuesday - All Seats
Mon-Wed - Local Students With
Current ID’s.
Thurs. - KORA “Over 30 Nite"
•DENOTES DOLBY STEREO
The Garden District
Lunch on the Porch
846-4360 108 North Ave.
Page 4/The Battalion/Wednesday, November 5, 1986
PLAZA 3
226 Southwest Pkwy
693-2457i
"CROCODILE DUNDEE ra is
7:151
9:351
"COLOR OF MONEY r
7:25
9:45
CHILDREN OF A
LESSER GOO r
7:351
9:501
MANOR EAST 3
Manor East Mall
833-8300
3737 E 29th St Bryan Tx 268-4001
25‘OFF
Minimum $1.00 purchase.
Limit one coupon per visit.
Not valid with any other offer Card expires 12/31/86
TRICK OR TREAT r
7:30 j
9:501
*LET’S GET HARRY r
TOUGH GUYSrs
SCHULMAN 6
2002 E. 29th 775-2463
TOP GUN P6
7:10
9:50
SKYBANDITS
7:15
9:30
KKYS 105 Presents
$ DOLLAR DAYS $
This Week’s Features Are:
STAND BY ME r
7:33
9:40
RUTHLESS PEOPLE r
7:20
9:45
"RUNNING SCAREDr
7:15
9:35
BACK TO SCHOOL pais
7:25
9:55
CASH
for gold, silver,
old coins, diamonds
Full Jewelry Repair
Large Stock of
Diamonds
Gold Chains
TEXAS COIN
EXCHANGE
404 University Dr.
846-8916
3202-A Texas Ave.
(across from El Chico.Br/an)
779-7662
Stage Center presents
Thorton Wilder's
“Our Town”
Nov. 6,7,8 & 13,14,15
A&M Presbyterian Church
College Station
Adults $6
Students w/ID $4
Tickets at Box Office
Senolr Citizens $4
Children under 12 $2. 50
Reservations 693-0060
# AM/PM Clinics
Minor Emergencies
10% Student Discount with ID card
3820 Texas Ave.
Bryan, Texas
846-4756
401 S. Texas Ave.
Bryan, Texas
779-4756
8a.m.-11 p.m. 7 days a week
Walk-in Family Practice
I
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IT
A
i
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a
A
ft
Skaggs
Shopping
Center
846-4234
DINNER SPECIAL
1 A lb. Hamburger
Jumbo French Fries
16 oz. Soft Drink
only $1. !
99
No Coupon Needed
All you have to do
is bring anything
with FATBURGERon it.
£
offer good after 6 pm all semester
not good for delivery or carry out.
*
0
«
0
#
0
I
0
4
£
0
4
!
0
Police Beat
The following were reported
to the University Police Depart
ment through Monday:
MISDEMEANOR THEFT:
• Five bicycles were reported
stolen.
• Four backpacks were re
ported stolen.
• A student reported that
someone stole 12 pairs of bras
and panties, one slip and two
pairs of panty hose from where
she had left them drying in her
dormitory laundry room.
FLEEING A PEACE OFFI
CER:
• An officer reported seeing a
man riding a bicycle at night with
out a headlight. The officer said
when he attempted to stop the bi
cyclist, the rider took off into a
parking lot, driving between
aisles and vehicles. The rider fi
nally was stopped, and when the
officer asked the man why he ran,
the man said he just wanted to
make the officer work to catch
him. The man was given a justice
of the peace citation for driving
without a headlight and fleeing a
peace officer.
FELONY THEFT:
• A student reported that
someone stole his 1982 sports car
from a campus parking lot.
• A student reported that
someone stole his 1982 motorcy
cle from a campus dorm area.
Car owner
to appeal case
against horse
I"
What’s up
HOUSTON (AP) — The owner
of a car damaged by a spooked
Houston police horse says he will ap
peal a judge’s ruling that the city is
not responsible for repairs because
the animal cannot be considered a
motor-driven vehicle.
Larry Laurie lost his bid Monday
to make the city, which owned the
horse named Sunny, pay for the
damage.
“If Sheriff Matt Dillon on ‘Cun-
smoke’ had tied up his horse and it
kicked the wheel off a wagon, don’t
you think he would have paid for the
damage?” Laurie’s attorney Joe
Pelton said.
Pelton had attempted to show the
horse could be considered a self-pro
pelled vehicle in the same category
as a car, which could have held Offi
cer Greg Sokoloski personally liable
for his mount.
But County Civil Court-at-Law
Judge Jon Allen Hughes ruled
Sunny could not be classified as a
motor-driven vehicle.
The judge ruled the city and So
koloski had not been negligent and
denied Laurie’s request for $780 to
repair his 1983 Oldsmobile Cutlass.
Sunny has been given back to its
orginal owner since the May 8, 1985
incident.
New vaccine family called
best hope for fighting AIDS
COLLEGE STATION (AP) — A
new family of vaccines based on the
body’s responses to its own infection
fighters might be the best hope for
developing an anti-AIDS vaccine, a
San Antonio researcher said in a
briefing of national science writers.
By manipulating the natural im
mune system of the body, anti-idi-
otype vaccines might react against
many diseases, including AIDS, that
plague the United States and Third
World countries, said Dr. Ronald
Kennedy, an immunologist with the
Southwest Foundation for Biomedi
cal Research.
Among the diseases that anti-idi-
otype vaccines might work against
are hepatitis B virus, encephalitis,
pneumonia, polio, infantile diar
rhea, meningitis, African sleeping
sickness, snail fever and rabies, he
said.
Anti-idiotype antibodies are pro
duced to curb the body’s ability to
launch germ-fighters and are an es
sential part of the immune response,
he said.
Having the same shape and struc
ture as the antigens that started the
first wave of attacks on an infection,
anti-idiotype antibodies react with
the first group of antibodies pro
duced to fight the foreign substance,
he explained.
Wednesday
DEPARTMENT OF ENGLISH: Cindy Schnelby will condu G |
a writing outreach session, “Cutting out the Fat: Howitg!
Eliminate Wordiness in Your Writing,” at 6:30 p.m. in 15:0
Blocker.
HISTORY CLUB: will hold a presentation on the “Ancienil
Library of Alexandria” at 7 p.m. in 407 A-B Rudder.
PUBLIC RELATIONS STUDENT SOCIETY OF AMER
ICA: Mary Helen Bowers, Educational Information Sen I
ices Director at A&M, will speak on writing speeches foil
P.R. purposes at 6 p.m. in 014 Reed McDonald.
ADVERTISING ASSOCIATION: Hal Hardy, of Ad f
Houston,” will speak on resumes and portfolios at 7 p.m.in
127 Blocker.
COLLEGE OF LIBERAL ARTS: Dr. Ann McDonald, asso
ciate director of the Placement Center, and Dr. Candid;
Lutes, associate dean of liberal arts, will speak on “Liben
Arts Students and the TAMU Placement Center” at 5p.m
in 302 Rudder.
MSC HOSPITALITY: will hold a mandatory meeting fora!
Miss TAMU Scholarship Pageant applicants at 6 p.m. ii
321 Physics.
NAVARRO HOMETOWN CLUB: will meet at 8:30 p.m it
504 Rudder.
PHI ETA SIGMA: will meet at 7 p.m. in 401 Rudder.
GREAT COMMISSION STUDENTS: will present “Be Al||
That You Can Be,” biblical perspectives on the pinnacle oil
success, at 7:30 p.m. in 1 15 Kleberg.
RESIDENCE HALL ASSOCIATION: will meet at 8:30pH:
in 410 Rudder.
MSC POLITICAL FORUM: will meet at 8
Rudder.
EUROPE CLUB: will meet at 9:30 p.m. at
mato.
OFF-CAMPUS AGGIES: will meet at 6:30
Zachry.
ALCOHOLICS ANONYMOUS: will meet at noon on cam
pus. For location call 845-5826.
TAMU CYCLING TEAM: will meet at 7 p.m. in 401 Rudder
GAY STUDENT SERVICES: will meet. Foi more informa
tion call GAYLINE: 846-6051.
TAMU SPORTS CAR CLUB: will meet at 7 p.m. in 502 Rud
der.
AGGIE SPELEOLOGICAL SOCIETY: will meet at 8:3(
p.m. in 404 Rudder.
th
ha
in
el<
st i
ov
.) ()
:30 p.m. in 50
the Flying To-H
p.m. in
Thursday
DEPARTMENT OF ENGLISH: Sally Wade will conduct!
writing outreach session, “Writing for a Reader,” at 6:3C
p.m. in 153 Blocker.
Items for What's Up should be submitted to The Battalml
216 Reed McDonald, no less than three working dijil
prior to desired publication date.
Jackie Sherrill & TAMU Football
say
i
THE
BLOOD CENTER
at Wadley
aggie blood drive
DATES: November 3, 4, 5 & 6
Commons Msn t'ona mo'-' 5 P 1 "
10 am to 8 pm 10 am to 6 pm 10 am to 6 pm 10 am to ^
PLACES AND TIMES:
Fish Pond MSC
Zachry
Another service of Alpha Phi Omega, Student Government, Omega Phi Alpha