DUCATOR Buy Program Apple Computer, Inc. and ComputerLand of Brazos Valley have joined forces to make a special offer to all educators in K-12 and higher education. Beginning on April 15, As a full-time professional educator or administrator, you have an opportunity to make a purchase of an Apple CPU system (for your personal and work-at-home use) at tremendous savings. To qualify for these savings under the Educator Buy Program, you merely need to be a full-time professional employee certified by your employer to be involved in the instructional process. ComputerLand is the area Authorized Education Dealer. So call us today for more information on the Educator Buy Program, and get yourself an Apple—the computer that bears fruit forever. Authorized Apple Education Dealer 409-693-2020 SENIOR WEEKEND 1987 Senior Bash Friday, May 1, 8 p.m. Texas Hall of Fame, $5/couple Featuring Texas Highriders X*' .. Hi*' f ■' f K* V s ... V.WW* Senior Banquet* Saturday, May 2, 7 p.m. College Station Hilton, $30/couple Cocktail Hour, 6 p.m. Guest Speaker Jack Rains, ’60, Texas Secretary of State r t .1 . c /gSfknnt. s r,4-- -y ... V c* •'«*• 'J it Saturday, May 2, 9 p.m. * MSC and Rudder Exhibit Hall, $35/couple Featuring Michael, Michael and the Maxx Ed Gerlach Orchestra * Tickets for Senior Banquet must be purchased by Noon Friday, May 1. The Senior Weekend Package at $65/couple, includes all three events. Tickets are on sale at Rudder Box Office at 845-1234. All tickets are presale. Page 6/The BattalionAVednesday, April 29, 1987 Warped by Scott McCulla HELLO, ALFRED ZOWE, WRPD static/y /AAA'AGE-K SPEAKING- HELLO,m WATCHING VOUK DIS6USTJV6 "SLASHER " fAOVIE RIGHT NONvj... HELLO, KIRS. FATUKl... ...ANp THERE'S TWO NAKE.P* GROPING^ ^TAWITtV) AW^rv SweiTry ^TA^BlTiy OH, WAIT A MW,mf TOST GOT HACKEPTd BITS «*, n s o Waldo by Kevin Thornes THE BOY5 IN THE WALTON SYNDICATE FRAMED ME INTO SMUGGLING CHICKEN NUGGETS FROM •SBISA 1 MAYBE WE CAN CUT A DEAL WITH THE JUDICIAL BOARD! ... SO IF YOU DROP THE CHARGES ON MY CLIEtn, WE CAN CRACK THE E-RAMP CONNECTION! YEAH, WE CAN SEND THEM UP THE RIVER, OR BETTER YET... Lev WE CAN SEND THEM HP . HIGH WAV y New DPS device uses eyes to establish identification By Sandra Saldivar Reporter People rely on their eyes to iden tify what they see, but now eyes can be used for personal identification as well. The Department of Public Safety is testing a device that would record a photographic image of the most unique biological trait a person pos sesses: the eye, or, more specifically, the blood vessels in the retina of the eye. The “eye signature” would serve the purpose of verifying an in dividual’s identity like a fingerprint. The Brazos County DPS driver li cense office was selected as the site for a five-week testing period of the EyeDentiachine and implemented the program April 13. Officials say the device could eliminate the issu ance of fraudulent and ’ duplicate driver licenses. Sgt. Albert Tovar said the DPS is sues four million licenses a year. Some people go to several driver license offices, use someone else’s birth certificate or some other iden tification document, give a false name and address and receive seve ral identities and driver’s licenses, Tovar said. A more precise and quicker iden tification system would benefit ev eryone, Tovar said. Brian Withrow, DPS inspector for driver license service, said, “No one’s eyes are the same, not even identical twins, because each eye has a differ ent retina pattern.” Security and Time Control Corp. is the Texas distributor of the Eye- Dentification machine. A company representative, Mike Lawrence, said, “Fingerprints are not as unique as people would like to think. It takes a well-trained eye to detect the differ ences between fingerprints. “Calculations necessary to isolate and identify a fingerprint require a machine with great precision.” With one eye scan, he said, the chances of the machine accepting an imposter is one in a million. Having both eyes on record would reduce the chance of false acceptance to one in a trillion. At the Bryan office, original and renewal driypr’s liceuse applicants are being asked to volunteer for the simple eye-scanning process. The person being scanned looks into the machine, lines up two green cones of light and pushes the scan button. If the project were implemented, Lawrence said, the machine would record a photographic image of the eye, convert the image to a numeri cal code and store the information in the central computer in Austin for future reference. Tovar said the office is not re cording the scanning image in the Austin central computer because the project is only in the testing stage. The department is keeping track of the number of people scannd, the length of time it takesem[ to explain the test and the puici opinion about the project, he said. Jean Nuche, a driver’s license(i flee clerk, said the machine wasea to learn to operate. After applicants take theeyescan they are asked to fill out a comm sheet, which Nuche said have bet positive so far. Reveil Present $25.°° o edition f you! Tovar said, “Lots of people tbit it is a good idea, especially when tit find out it could prevent somi f rom using their license or appl 1 for their license.” If the eye-scanning program implemented, applicants will be to take a vision test and the eye by using the same machine. Lawrence said the EveDentife non mat bine easib can he instanj into the vision testers alreadybt| used by DPS. Although it is too soon toquffl pi iee for the project, Lawrences! "It appears that the departimI could receive federal funding, would mean the project wouM cost 1 exas anything to have them (limes in si ailed in DPS units alloU the state.” The testing stage will last uri May 22, then the procedure and suits will be evaluated to deterniJ if the project should be it mented on a statewide basis. Hightower says state economy depends on ‘grass-roots’ workers SAN ANTONIO (AP) — Work ers, not corporate executives and major companies, should be the key to the state’s economic development, Agriculture Commissioner Jim Hightower said Tuesday. “We’ve got to begin changing our whole economic attitude, our poli cies,” Hightower said. “I think we’ve got to develop new industry at the grass-roots level. We’ve been ignor ing the grass roots. The trunks of the trees are drying up and dying.” Hightower said the state agricul ture department is assisting in the development of 52 agriculture proc essing projects, involving more than $218 million. The projects will pro vide 5,000 new jobs, he said. Hightower criticized national gov ernment and corporate officials For forcing hard economic conditions that hurt workers. “What we’re doing is investing in the rich,” Hightower told the United Food and Commerical Workers In ternational Union. “They think they’re the top dogs and you all are just a bunch of fire hydrants out there,” he said. The closing of 131 Safeway gro cery stores in North Texas has af fected thousands of people, he said. He said the only ones to profit from the closures are theinvestn*! group Kolhberg, Kravis and erts, which purchased Safeway.3 others involved in sale. “They’re going to profit, but® economy loses.” Hightower stf “Later this year, KKR prob take Safeway public again and mil 1 a huge profit on its sale of stock.” I le said other grocery storecM may buy the Safeway stores, union members will not be hired “They’re not going to hire u# workers, not because of the hi^ salaries,” Hightower said. "% don’t want the union partnerslii that has served us so well,” - - i . : Slice into a free pizza. At Little Caesars? when -you buy one of our cheesy, delicious A 100% natural pizzas, you get another one to £ slice into. free. mM What great ■[(n^ way to save IlUVL money. 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