The Battalion. (College Station, Tex.) 1893-current, March 04, 1987, Image 4

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    Rock or Roll
PAY NO ENROLLMENT FEE!!
• Free Aerobic Classes
• Indoor Swimming Pool
• Racquetbal!
• Tanning Bed
• Tennis
• Snack Bar
• Lounge
Now through Saturday, March 7 you
can join the finest athletic club in
B/CS and pay no enrollment fee.
With your student ID and mem
bership card from any other club in
town, you can be an Aerofit member
for only:
• Indoor Jogging Track
• Weight Machines
• Free Weights
• Volleyball
• Basketball
$19.°° per month
Two masters
of music in
concert
once!
at
Misha Dichter,
pianist
Kazimierz Kord,
music director and conductor
Misha Dichter, a champion of the Keyboard wiU perform with the Warsaw
Philharmonic Orchestra under Kazimierz Kord, world renowned music direc
tor and conductor, March 7 in Rudder Auditorium at 8 p.m.
Misha Dichter has been described by Hews week as "the best of the new breed
of pianists". His impeccable recitals, orchestral performances and his highly
acclaimed recordings have made him a favorite of audiences around the world.
Kazimierz Kord has been music director of the Warsaw Philharmonic Orchestra
since 1977. He has appeared with orchestras and opera companies throughout
the world including Paris, Toronto, London, Moscow, Berlin, Tokyo, Mexico and
the U.S.A.
Kord and Dichter are presented as part of the continuing music of MSC OPAS
Fourteen. The MSC Opera and Performing Arts Society brings master musi
cians from all over the world. Find out how two musicians and one of the
finest orchestras in the world make music in Rudder Auditorium.
Don't miss this rare opportunity to see and hear the best. Order your tickets
for the March 7 performance from the MSC Box Office.
VISA and MasterCard call 845-1234.
MSC Opera and Performing Arts Society
: Memorial Student Center • Texas A&M University • Box J1 • College Station TX 77844-9081
Page 4/The BattalionAVednesday, March 4,1987
House OKs
ban on court
disclosures
AUSTIN (AP) — The House ten
tatively approved Tuesday, without
debate, a bill making it a felony to
knowingly disclose prematurely the
contents of an appellate court deci
sion or opinion.
A final vote is needed in the
House.
The measure, by Rep. John Smi-
thee, R-Amarillo, was amended by
Smithee to provide that a violation
must be “knowingly and deliberate.”
There was no discussion or debate
of the bill before the voice vote.
The bill was introduced after pub
lished reports several months ago
that some Texas Supreme Court de
cisions were leaked to attorneys
prior to their official release in the
courtroom. Smithee’s bill would add
the offense to a present provision
that makes it a third-degree felony
for public servants to use unreleased
official information for their own
good or for others.
Punishment could be two to 10
years imprisonment and a fine up to
$5,000.
Police Beat
Warp
The following were reported
to the University Police Depart
ment from Feb. 23 through Sun
day:
MISDEMEANOR THEFT:
• Five backpacks were re
ported stolen from Sbisa and the
Commons dining halls.
• Two bicycles were reported
stolen, and one bicycle was recov
ered by University Police.
• Three thefts occurred in the
Langford Architecture Center,
including a purse and parachute
bag which had been left unat
tended, and a pencil-sketch draw
ing for a class project.
• An officer arrested six peo
ple for possession of four Univer
sity Police traffic barricades.
FELONY THEFT:
• A maroon 1980 Honda
Accord parked near Rudder
Tower was reported stolen.
ASSAULT:
• While an of ficer was talking
to two juveniles in a campus park
ing lot, one of them struck the of
ficer in the chest with her fist.
Both juveniles were taken to the
University Police Department
and released into their parents’
custody.
CRIMINAL MISCHIEF:
• Walton Hall E-ramp resi
dents were found drunk byanof l
Ik ci responding to a i( j |><mof[
loud noise. The incident ocl
cut red last Wednesday, the samt|
day the residents were to havev
cated the dorm by an order fronJ
University officials.
• A man said he saw an A&li|
shuttle bus crash through a gate]
arm near (lie A.P. Beutel HealtlJ
Center mall.
• A student reported thaij
someone broke out the real win !
dow of her 1982 Oldsmobiltl
while it was parked in a campuil
parking lot.
PLACES WEAPONS PROHIBj
I TED:
• A student reported that I
saw a man carrying a .45-calibci
automatic in a first-floor Lallwat
of Krueger Hall. Responding of
ficers could not find the manor
the gun.
HARASSMENT:
• A student in Hughes
reported that she has been receit
ing obscene phone calls.
• A Mosher resident reported
she has been receiving annoying
phone calls at all hours of thedav
CRIMINAL TRESPASS:
• A student reported that!
men entered her dorm room
while she was taking a shower.
A FOOT Mi.
JITH OUR U
1FAN5 YOU
TREE EDU
/
Blood drive hits A&M early
to beat spring break ‘drain 1
By
By Jessica Brown
Reporter
“Donate before you vacate,” this
semester’s blood drive theme, is an
attempt to get students to give blood
before they leave for spring break,
Tonja Scheer, blood drive co-chair
man for Omega Phi Alpha, said.
The catchy phrase is based on the
theory that students return from
their spring break more physically
drained than they were before the
break. And for many students, the
eight remaining weeks of school are
too hectic for benevolence of donat-
“Wadley Center Blood Bank,”
Boswell said, “provides special help
for A&M students, former students,
faculty and family when in need of
blood.”
“In years past,” Boswell
people under 110 pounds,weredjL |
eligible to donate because of possit*^^
faintness or nausea." I ,
•unggirl:
Scott Bentley, blood drive charf| The ser
man for APO, said a “trossbleei lb black v
campaign also has been started the spring
comoat the problem of female spomen arc
dents shying away from blood dot program,
tion because of fear of the needle p Carol M
“We are getting male dorms || A&M Ju
join female dorms when donatini fthr progra
Bentley said. “ That way, the gifer about t
can give some support to the girls she had bt
Througl
If taken to a Wadley-based hospi
tal, she said, the A&M-related pa
tient will be reimbursed $10 — the
replacement fee — for each pint of
blood used. Insurance usually covers
the remaining $48 for each pint
needed.
mg.
The blood drive started Monday
and will last through Thursday.
Students can donate at four loca
tions around campus — the Com
mons, the Memorial Student Center,
the Fish Pond and the Zachry Engi
neering Center.
Margie Boswell, blood drive,chair
man for Student Government, wants
to educate those whd do n^t believe
their donation can benefit them.
Boswell added that for those
A&M-related patients with no medi
cal insurance, Wadley will pay the
full amount. Wadley also will pay the
full cost of the blood if the patient is
not taken to a Wadley-based hospi
tal.
This year’s blood drive, sponsored
by Student Government, Alpha Phi
Omega and Omega Phi Alpha, is in
troducing a “lightweight” program
' to allow students who weigh between
100 and 109 pounds to donate —but
they’ll donate less than a pint.
predc
jmmunic
ack studt
Murphy
slant pre
Scheer said a pizza party
given for the tern donating maleaa
female dorms, for the top donal
organization of fewer than
members, and lor the top organulcurriculun
tion with more than 100 members ment, to
Bentley said Aggies have b« Workshops
quite generous with their blood<t them how
nations in recent years, donatiifdents.
more than 4,500 pints last yearr, Murphy
earn the school the title of “Colletaome posi
of the Year" by Wadley. iyounggirb
"There
Unmarried graduate students may rent
apartments in Married Student Housing
By Jade Boyd
Reporter
Unmarried graduate students re
cently have become eligible to live in
University-owned apartments —
more commonly known as Married
Student Housing.
John M. Sodolak, manager of
Married Student Housing, says the
idea was first discussed in Fall 1985,
and in Spring 1986 the first single
graduate students began moving
into the apartments. Of the 709
apartments owned by the University,
121 are now occupied by one or
more single graduate students.
Prices for the apartments range
from $165 per month for a one-bed
room apartment to $260 per month
for a two-bedroom apartment.
Each apartment is leased from the
University by an individual student,
and the University deals only with
that student, Sodolak says. The Uni
versity limits the number of people
living in a single apartment to two,
but any person in a graduate degree-
producing program is eligible to live
in the apartments.
“We’re currently placing appli
cants who applied last October,” he
says, “so there is approximately a
four-and-a-half-month waiting list.”
Response to the new program has
been good, and there have been no
complaints from either married or
havioral p
^oup of
he says. “
heir edu
londerful
foies but i
single tenants regarding the
he says.
lays.
felt th
Rsier prog
Tenant Jamil Hamdallah sat 0 :PP or tum
“It’s nice and neat and it's veryP
venient.” B 25 when ]
Hamdallah, who is studying IfP soror ' t y
his master’s degree in mechaniajp 11 ^ help
engineering, has lived in the cool 1 here a
plex across from Skaggs Alpha an d
since January 1986. He is not mail ^ 1X 1
ried and shares rent and bills with ® use they
Rlurphy s;
roommate.
“It is so much more inexpeiw
than private apartments, " Hamdalf
lah says. Water, sewer and gas an
Were chosi
assimilate.
“I begai
urnished by the University, an ^ ie ) thouj
Hamdallah says his most expensit
electricity bill was less than $40.
Barett Shoes
for women only!
Everything a mall shoe store has, except high prices
Thre
Storewide Shoe Sale
All of our newest spring styles on sale! Nothing held
TEXAS
was criticall
vere hurt c
2ity Refine
said.
Miguel (
ifeFlight t
jalveston,
edition,
* EX'S? 30% off
Shoes not purchased in multiples of 2 or 3 |
will be charged at regular single pair price.
Culpepper Plaza
1723 South Texas Avenue
College Station 693-4423
MasterCard, Visa or Choice. Open evenings and open Sunday 12:30 to 6 p.m. We reserve the right to
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