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About The Battalion. (College Station, Tex.) 1893-current | View Entire Issue (Jan. 30, 1987)
Page 4/The Battalion/Friday, January 30, 1987 MEW LOOK rTHE SHAPE OF THIHOS Perm Speciad Hair Styling Sadon for Men and Woman $27.50 Cut Included ■,N€Xys e Coupon Good Until Feb. 15, 1987 4417 Texas Ave. South Q /% £* (next to Fajita Rita’s) OtkO - " O X hI Sarah Watts Pianist - Teacher Degree, piano, and two years’ Piano Faculty, Baylor University 66 Serious Students of all Ages” 822-6856 $2.50 ADMISSION (1) M-W-Students w/current ID (2) TUE-Famlly Nlte-AII Seats (3) THUR-KORA Over 30’ Night (4) Any Show Before 3 PM ChegM-Chiu FREE CHILD CARE WHILE YOU ATTEND SCHULMAN THEATRES FOR INFO CALL: 846-6657 COMING ATTRACTIONS KIM CATRELL & ANDREW McCARTNEY in MANNEQUIN JUDD NELSON in FROM THE HIP - MEL GIBSON in LETHAL WEAPON JOHN HUGHES’ SOME KIND OF WONDERFUL MANOR EAST 3 MANOR EAST MALL FRIDAY - 7:10 9:40 12:00 SATURDAY 2:10 4:40 7:10 9:40 12:00 SUNDAY 2:10 4:40 7:10 9:40 ? NOMINATED FOR 4 is: f»ni ncni m noc aiaiji GOLDEN GLOBE AWARDS if , - 1-—1 INCLUDING —, •• •' BEST PICTURE (DRAMA)- "THE BEST HLM0E1988. ..a great movie." — Roger Fben. 9SKEL 4 EBERT & THE MCWIES "SHATTERING*. This violent, deeply moving e?®gy of war will leave you shaking —oavic-v-ifn vewsweex "YOU WILL NEVER LOOK AT A WAR PI .TE THE SAME WAY AGAIN AFTBI. SfflNG "A SINGULAR ACHIEVEMENT j._ ...vivid, terse, exceptionally moving... the tension builds and never lets up.” "...A GREAT AMERICAN MOVIE ...One comes out excited yet shaken and close to tears." — David Dandy. NCW YORK MAGAZINE THE YEAR'S MOST POWERFUL FILM. M0N-FRI 7:20 9:50 Sat & Sun 2:20 4:50 7:20 9:50 THE FATE OF THE FUTURE LIES HIDDEN IN THE PAST, SOMEWHERE ON EARTH... 4906. STAR TREK IS A REGISTERED TRADEMARK Of PARAMOUNT PICTURES CORPORATION 3 BY PARAMOUNT PICTURES CORPORATION ALL RIGHTS RESERVED COPYRIGHT M0N-FRI 7:25 9:55 Sat & Sun 2:30 5:00 7:25 9:55 Richard Chamberlain Sharon $lone G fcjfttermaiit g^ndiVl9st(itqof(iokl GkCAMNON [PG] ACIEASINO coweoRATto* ll 226 SOUTHWEST PKWY. PLAZA 3 Mon-Fri 7:15 9:35 Sat & Sun 2:15 4:50 7:15 9:35 “HILARIOUS ADVENTURE COMEDY' — NEWSWEEK, David Anson “Very, very funny. Midler and Long are hilarious.” — THE CBS MORNING PROGRAM GAOr^e KirQO BETTE MIDLER THE PG-13 GOLDEN CHILD Mon-Fri 7:25 9:45 Sat & Sun 2:30 5:00 7:25 9:45 Guess who’s playing doctor? Richard Pryor is in Critical Condition A comedy of epidemic proportions. A PARAMOUNT PICTURE _ conrwwtT ittm •' BY WUUMOUKT xTln- BY HUUMOUKT aJ^ri 1MES OMPOftATUN PCTUNES COWOfUTON SPECIAL SNEAK PREVIEW - SAT 1/31 9:55 Premier Engagement Begins Friday, Feb. 6th. Judd Nelson Elizabeth Perkins FFOM fp ..usscib SCHULMAN 6 775-2463 >n-Frl V125 9:55 at & Sun 2:15 4:45 7:25 9:55 Mon-Fri 7:30 4:50 Sat & Sun 2:40 4:45 7:30 9:50 PAUL HOGAN There's a little of him in all of us. IPG-h <32* A PARAMOUNT PICTURE COPYRIGHT © ’966 BY PARAMOUNT PICTURES CORPORATION tp?/ .Y^V* ALL RIGHTS RESERVED * —i- DOLLAR DAYS This week we have the following shows for just a buck *1 Mon-Fri 7:10 9:45 Sat & Sun 2:10 4:40 7:10 9:45 pg-13 KATHLEEN TURNER PEGGY SUE GOT MARRIED Mon-Fri 7:10 9:40 Sat & Sen 2:20 4:40 7:10 9:40 TOM CRUISE TOP GUN Mon-Fri 7:15 9:35 Sat A Sun 2:15 4:35 7:15 9:35 THOMAS HOWELL pg 13 SOUL MAN What’s up D c . V 4 Friday INTERVARSITY CHRISTIAN FELLOWSHIP: Paul Id will speak on evangelism at 7 p.tn. in 301 Rudder. CHI ALPHA CHRISTIAN FELLOWSHIP: will meet aijgj^^ p.m. in 156 Blocker. V; LATTER-DAY SAINT STUDENT ASSOCIATION: v|l meet at noon at the LDS Institute Building at 100[B()| Dextei. ;lip uj DELTA SIGMA THETA: will meet at 9 p.m. in 221 MSC. ro cket TAMU ASSOCIATION OF CARIBBEAN STUDENTS:viold t meet at 7 p.m. in 404 Rudder. PUERTO RICAN STUDENT ASSOCIATION: will meet- iay applit Jlu :hout> ations are availableattl| ta ii : rock ft rez] M ■ BIG EVENT: applications for organizations and individujf" are available through Feb. 13 in the Student Programs0|B o fice and the Student Government Offi 7:30 p.m. in 404 Rudder. WILEY LECTURE SERIES: Student Programs Office. CLASS OF ’88: applications for Boot Dane e subchairmenife available through Feb. 6 in the Student Programs Office ervfm< jl OIK lind a h tei a L<a H w Saturday INTERVARSITY CHRISTIAN FELLOWSHIP: will hoi evangelism workshop at the Lutheran Student Center. PARSONS’ MOUNTED CAVALRY:will hold a free perfegn nr .nl M. 2S1S ip-' i Olli fili < eizecI lusinc mance at the Fiddlers Green Stahl a.m. FARMHOUSE FRATERNITY: will p.m. at 2717 Celinda in Q illege Su hold ition. fr< tarbecu Sunday i ‘ u l BIG EVENT COMMITTEE: will hold a publicity worlsrLI, fromt 1 to 5 p.m. on the second floor of the Pavilion. CENTER FOR RETAILING STUDIES: will hold a art fair symposium from 4 p.m. to 7:30 p.m. in the Brazos phitheatre Room of the College Station Hilton. Hi ) Monday BRAZOS COUNTY RAPE CRISIS CENTER: will training sessions for new volunteers through Friday. ,^- a 6:30 p.m. to 9 p.m. Call 776-RAPE for applications and LLg formation. jjJS MSC SCONA: will meet at 8:30 p.m. in 206 MSC. ho b. TAMU JUDO: will hold practice Monday, Tuesday Ji 0(] Wednesday from 7 p.m. to 9 p.m. in 236 G. RollieWbH 10 New members are welcome. No experience is necessan :0n t £ BUSINESS STUDENT COUNCIL: will hold ield .. ... s ' , ' , l Xl '^nrh seminars concerning Women in Business tromoaj se , noon in 102 Blocker and from noon to 2 p.m. in liT exas Blocker. A luncheon will be held at noon in theCok|^ n Station Hilton. :r’sd INTRAMURAL RECREATIONAL SPORTS: entrie: E slam-dunk, wallyball, pre-season softball and softball;^ available in 159 Read. ALPHA ZETA: Dr. L.S. Pope will speak at 7 p.m. in 1131! berg. COLLEGIATE 4-H: will meet at 8 p.m. in the lounge of 13 berg Animal and Food Science Center. MSC CAMERA CLUB: will meet at 7 p.m. in 206MSC. AMERICAN MARKETING ASSOCIATION: will meei 6:30 p.m. in 165 Blocker. AGGIE ALLEMANDERS: will hold free square dance less from 7 p.m. to 8:30 p.m. in 226 MSC. PARENTS WEEKEND: applications and scheduleformsi available for any group planning an activity. Applicant' are due Feb. 27. MSC LITERARY ARTS: is now accepting submissions! Litmus. Call 845-1515 for more information. Items for What’s Up should be submitted to The Battel* 216 Reed McDonald, no less than three working in prior to desired publication date. ! State Senator say new bill may east prison crowding AUSTIN (AP) — The chairman of the Senate Criminal Justice Com mittee introduced a bill Thursday he said could help ease prison crowd ing, but legislative leaders said find ing more money for Texas prisons remains the critical problem. Top lawmakers said they still don’t know where they will get the millions needed to make im provements ordered by a federal judge who has threatened to fine Texas $24 million a month begin ning April 1. “We need several million dollars to try to take care of the prison sys tem, (and) I still don’t know where the money’s going to come from,” House Speaker Gib Lewis said. Lewis, D-Fort Worth, said Repub lican Gov. Bill Clements is studying a proposal to temporarily lower the state’s contributions to the Teacher Retirement System and generate an additional $83 million for prisons. Lawmakers and Clements aides said reducing state contributions to the teacher retirement fund for six months might provide enough money for Texas to escape the $800,000 in daily fines threatened by L.S. District Judge William Wayne Justice over failure to imple ment prison reforms. But almost as quickly as the idea surfaced, cries of protest were heard from teachers. “This is a shameful proposal,” de clared John Cole, president of the Texas Federation of Teachers. “This is not the state’s money, and the state ought to keep its hands off.” Cole said the state wouldn’t have this problem if Clements had ap proved proposed prison construc tion during his first term. “The state’s retired teachers should not be asked to bail Governor Bill out of a jam caused by his own actions,” Cole said. “If he had not ve toed a prison construction bill dur ing his first term, we wouU : facing fines.” Sen. Boh McFarland, ih ton, Thursday offered abil» could accomplish two key! keeping the inmate popular low prison capacity, and mat easier to hire needed meifc sonnel for the prison system' requirement of Justice’s ordei T It also would create mcil ease prison crowding b) j more probation and parole a* lives for up to 3,000 “low-rii 1 victs who committed theftentj “Such low-risk inmates&! vetted from TDC . . .loaf which will include intensivetj sion probation, intensive 1 lence probation, house arrf'J ironic maintenance andsp* caseloads for probation i said. Mc Farland said he estimj total cost of the bill at aboiif lion. Besides lapping the tea ( tirement fund, legislat® 1 looking at other possibility! tain the extra prison mone'T ing: • Diverting some tax reve 1 ! rectly to a dedicated prison 1 the remainder of the Pf year, which ends Aug. 31. • Transferring unspend from other, so-far unspecimj cies. Clements asked theLf for authority to do this, lawmakers say the plani s | cated by the state’s $1 1 deficit. sing education trust' irplus state lands, f ■nts proposal, monejlj