Friday, June 12, 1987/The Battalion/Page 3 State and Local {Definitely Not Cold Medicine Photo by Robert W. Rizzo le, ethi rityin and {pcxas A&M University police officer, Bert inplace Hretzschrnar, displays a drug identification box designed to familiarize laymen with the appear- wehaif lahceof drugs. The Bryan police display is one pre sented at the Home Security and Safety show. The show will be held from 6-9 p.m. tonight at the Bra zos center. The show is open to the public. Admis sion to the show is free. arade to mark beginning of B-CS Juneteenth festival / By Jill Kami t|f Reporter )cal residents will join thousands Hither T exans in celebrating the 22nd year of freedom for blacks on tine 19, or Juneteenth as it is com- nonly called. Marion Haynes, a Bryan histo- ian. said the celebration of June- feenth is returning statewide. “It kind of faded out once, but it is eviving,” Haynes said. “It is a spe- |al day for us and we would not yam to let it fade out completely be- ause we want out children to know ibout it.” The Emancipation Proclamation, vhidi freed all slaves in the parts of America still in rebellion against the Jnion, was issued on Jan. 1, 1863, )y|'President Abraham Lincoln. However, the news did not reach fexas until June 19 when Gen. Gor ton Granger arrived in Galveston to inform Texans of black freedom. Festivities celebrating Juneteenth in Bryan-College Station, sponsored by the Brazos Valley Juneteenth Cel ebration Committee, will start at 9 a.m. Saturday with a parade at Kemp School, located at San Jacinto and Martin Luther King Jr. Boule vard. The parade is an annual event. The parade will proceed down Martin Luther KingJr. Boulevard to Thomas Park in east Bryan, where certificates will be awarded for the best floats. The winner of the contest will re ceive a $100 cash prize. The award for second place is $50 and the third-place prize is $25. The two best-decorated vehicles and march ing units will be given trophies. There will be a “splash” party on Wednesday with free swimming from 1 p.m. to 7 p.m. at Haswell Pool, located at Haswell and 25th streets in Bryan. A GospelFest is scheduled for Thursday at 7 p.m. at Thomas Park. Gospel choirs from the local area will provide entertainment. On Thursday, there will be a con cert at the park featuring Terrance Simien. His group specializes in zy- deco, the regional French dance mu sic featuring accordion and frottoir (metal washboard). Simien and his group were named Band of the Year at the 1986 Louisiana Zydeco Festi val. The Mallet Playboys, a band from Louisiana, and local jazz and popular music group Solid Founda tion also will perform. Live soul music will be played by The Soul Brothers on June 20 at the Lincoln Recreation Center, at 1000 Eleanor. The program will begin at 5:30 p.m., and Dr. Alvin Larke Jr., an assistant professor of agricultural education at Texas A&M, will be the guest speaker. prayo nd kil quit Couple seeks release of records of testimony about son’s death .(jticks 1 ' lUSTIN (AP) — If ajudge would ithit e ^i ase sea lcd transcripts of grand , jnijiry testimony, a Dallas couple says it )l ‘ l volld help them answer agonizing 11101 juestions about the alcohol-poison- ng death of their son. 1 rHlark Seeberger, 18, a pledge of SOinf' Phi Kappa Psi fraternity at the Uni- Jseedjeility of Texas, was found dead in /sick pisnormitory room last September. ^■uthorities said he had swallowed J Mid borii 16 to 20 ounces of rum during itt| e h»l|l|raternity outing known as a mtersfr” sni# Bkie youth’s father, Jeff See- s ' Jeiter, told State District judge Bob 1 b^H'P'kins, “We’d really like to find out dial happened that day, that night lC0 tnd afterwards. Just for peace of mind.” j A grand jury empaneled by Per il 801 ' kins reviewed Seeberger’s death and and' (blind that even though he was | Hdcuffed during the fraternity- 'ponsored ride, he was not coerced my nift drinking the rum. thy.ffij the pledge’s parents \ [to ,,o(i|in the sealed transcri . ijoiiilB'djury investigation in which ap- 11 proxiniately 20 people were ques- iioiied. want to ob- pts of the UIO^ Jeff Seeberger’s testimony came during a hearing requesting those records Wednesday. Perkins delayed a decision until June 25. Prosecutors in the Travis County District Attorney’s Office oppose re leasing the transcripts. Although the grand jury declined to return indictments in the case, it issued a report critical of fraternity “We’d really like to find out what happened that day, that night and af terwards. Just for peace of mind. ” — Jeff Seeberger, Mark s father leaders who “engaged in an effort to suppress cooperation by witnesses to the incident toward investigative au thorities.” Because no charges were filed in the case and because grand jury pro ceedings are secret, there has been no public testimony about the pledge’s death. During the hearing, Seeberger- PREGNANT? Consider all the alternatives FREE PROFESSIONAL COUNSELING SOUTHWEST MATERNITY CENTER (Established in 1895) 6487 Whitby Road, San Antonio, Texas 78240 (512) 696-2410 TOLL FREE 1-800-292-5103 Coupon INTERNATIONAL HOUSE of PANCAKE^ RESTAURANT Used Furniture & House Hold Items 3607-C South College across from Chicken Oil 846-2429 /v\-F 778-7064 10-5:30 Mon: Burgers & French Fries Tues: Buttermilk Pancakes Wed: Burger & French Fries Than Hot Dogs & French Fries Fri: Beer Battered Fish Sat: French Toast Sun: Spaghetti & Meat Sauce testified that although prosecutors allowed him and his wife to read the transcripts and take notes from them after the investigation was over, questions remain. He said that of the transcripts he and his wife had time to read, he was particularly alarmed by what he called the “Watergate approach” of some of the people involved in try ing to thwart the investigation into his son’s death. Jeff Seeberger said he and his wife wanted the transcripts because none of the people with their son the night he died would tell them what had happened. He said attorneys hired by the family to look into the possibility of f iling a civil suit against some of those involved also want the records. Jim Connolly, chief of the trial di vision of the district attorney’s office, testified that he and other prosecu tors kept the Seebergers apprised of what was happening in the investiga tion “primarily out of compassion to those people because of what they were going through.” Connolly said that release of the transcripts would erode the grand jury process that is based on secrecy. Books • Gifts • Supplies Hours: M-F 7:45-6 Sat 9-5 845-8681 All You Can Eat $ 2" 6 p.m.-6 a.m. no take outs must present this Expires July 15, 1987 I International House of Pancakes Restaurant 103 S. College Skaggs Center SMILE FOR YOUR FAMILY’S GENERAL DENTAL CARE $ 29 00 CLEANING, EXAM & X-RAYS ★Call For Appointment, Reg. $44 Less Cash Discount $15 • Dental Insurance Accepted • Emergency Walk Ins Welcome • Evening Appointments Available • Complete Family Dental Care • Nitrous Oxide Available • On Shuttle Bus Route mm k (Anderson Bus) CarePlusx>*tt MEDICAL/DENTAL CENTER Dan Lawson, D.D.S. 696-9578 1712 S.W. Parkway M-F 10 a.m.-8 p.m. (across from Kroger Center) Sat. 9 a.m.-1 p.m. Rock or Roll FACILITY • Indoor swimming pool • Racquetbail • Volleyball • Basketball • Indoor jogging track • Tennis • Weight machines • Aerobics studio • Tanning bed • Snack bar • Lounge STUDENT SUMMER SPECIAL! $ oo Join B/CS largest and most complete health club for only 720 per day! HURRY! Offer ends Saturday, June 13 CLASSES Aerobics Karate Gymnastics Racquetbail Tennis Water babies Ballet Scuba Water aerobics CPR Massage therapy Call Battalion Classified 845-2611