Friday, September 11,1987/The Battalion/Page 7 :ry officials said: 'ad' ■ has started to mic >. About 40(i ess people whotr : anc 2,200 state a:. fte rs are expectec ers to San Anton* ■av) traffic alont will be making the cit y fream all over. Lot •filer, a public n for the San an Center, said's est imated S36 mi on security, transf fo xl and hotels. 17 000 hotel roor. ar e still some roc tie ■ said. In then. Me nger, Holidai t h otels have roc: CO uter regions o( What’s up Transit, the cm i Ave 15 park-and-: ip around thf dn ning at 5 a.ci j tokens are on u :.B. grocery start and maps of tt ride stops also 2 ancery medical k that those attcr.: ar light clothinc and plenty oh olic beverages. k* on sale, and the chargi fe’s life man had across in the board svit other to his mo Burns has gist ie wanted his v ito killing her. ns neck icrked Friday I CHESS CLUB: will meet in 607 Rudder at 7 p.m. RESIDENCE HALL ASSOCIATION: will have an RHA beach bash at the Grove at 8 p.m. DATA PROCESSING MANAGING ASSOCIATION: will have a fall social at Oak Forest Club House at 8 p.m. UNITED CAMPU& MINISTRY: will have a Bible study at the A&M Presbyterian church at 6 P-m. and a peanut-but ter social at Rudder Fountain at 11 raO a.m. ITAMU BADMINTON CLUB: will practice and collect dues in 351 G. Rollie White at 7 p.m. INTERVARSITY CHRISTIAN FELLOWSHIP: The topic to be discussed is “Fellowship With God.” A cookout will follow in 301 Rudder at 7 p.m.. TAMU MOO DUK KWAN TAE KWON DO: will practice in 266 G. Rollie White at 6 p.m. LATTER DAY SAINTS STUDENT ASSOCIATION: will have a sandwich seminar with Edgar Wolferts speaking at the LDS Institute Building, 100 Dexter at 12 p.m. COLOMBIAN STUDENT ASSOCIATION: will meet in 704 Rudder at 7 p.m. PUERTO RICAN STUDENT ASSOCIATION: will meet and have officer elections in 402 Rudder at 7 p.m. Saturday PEER ADVISER: will have a reunion titled “A New Year’s Eve in September” in 221 MSC at 8 p.m. ECKANKAR: will host “Eckankar: Key to Secret Worlds” in the Bryan Public Library at 12:30 p.m. Sunday TAMU SPORTS CAR CLUB: will hold an autocross at park ing lot 71 by Kleberg at 9 a.m. QURANIC STUDY GROUP: will meet to discuss the Quran in 504 Rudder at 10 a.m. TAMU INTERNATIONAL FOLK DANCE CLUB: will meet for beginning folk-dance instruction in 226 MSC at 8 p.m. CAMP SBISA REUNION (Fish Camp): will meet for a reun ion in 601 Rudder at 4 p.m. Items for What’s Up should be submitted to The Battalion, 216 Reed McDonald, no less than three working days be fore desired publication date. State executes convicted killer in Huntsville HUNTSVILLE (AP) — Joseph Starvaggi, convicted of killing a pro bation officer while the man’s wife and daughter huddled in terror nearby, was put to death Thursday by Texas prison officials. Starvaggi, 34, had no final statement and shunned the tradi tional final evening meal given to condemned prisoners. He was pronounced dead at 12:30 a.m., eight minutes after the lethal drugs began flowing through his arms. “Oh, good!” said Grace Denson, whose husband, John, was slain in the 1976 attack during a burglary at their rural Montgomery County • home about 50 miles north of Hous- . ton. “One down, one to go.” Starvaggi, whose record also in cluded arrests for burglary and mar ijuana possession, was one of three men convicted for Denson’s death. Starvaggi and G.W. Green were sen tenced to death. Glen Earl Martin received a life prison term. Green remains on death row. Starvaggi lost appeals Wednesday in U.S. District Court in Houston and the 5th U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals in New Orleans before the U.S. Supreme Court, on a 6-2 vote, also rejected pleas for a reprieve. The Denson burglary and slaying occurred the evening of Nov. 19, 1976 as Starvaggi and at least two other men forced their way into the family’s home. Denson’s wife and 13-year-old daughter, tied hand and foot and forced to lie under a blan ket, heard Denson — already shot once — beg for his life before Star vaggi allegedly shot him two more times, killing him. rtife of infidelb J’CSS. d! ^SS Gym Short:' 30% off School remains top priority for married Aggie couple ks iff By Melissa Currie Reporter Sjason Griffith, 18, is a junior me- 1 chanical engineering major and most of the time he can be found with Scarlet Griffith, 17, a sopho- inbre business major. They’re younger than most of their class mates, but they enjoy football games, yell practices and bonfire like most couples in Aggieland. ■ However, there is a twist to the young couple’s relationship — they’re married. ■ Scarlet says people tend to stereo- type young married couples as un ambitious and as coming from Ipwer-income families. ■ But both Jason and Scarlet, who are probably the youngest married couple ever to attend Texas A&M, are ambitious and say a good educa tion is important. B At 15, Jason took his first college- level course, engineering calculus 102, and received an A. He com pleted high school in three years and graduated when he was 17. Because he had taken so many college courses prior to entering A&M last year, he has moved through school a lot faster than most students his age. Scarlet also was able to graduate from high school when she was 17 because she skipped the fourth grade and took college-level courses during summers in high school. She went to Blinn this summer and currently is enrolled in her first semester at A&M, but she is classi fied as a sophomore because she tested out of 14 college-credit hours before starting college. Jason and Scarlet exchanged vows in Killeen in March. Although their friends and family were concerned that they were too young to make this commitment, they are happy that they did. They met just like any other cou ple — mutual friends introduced them at a lake. After dating for five months, they decided to get mar ried. “My friends were really shocked,” Jason says. Education has always been impor tant to both of them and marriage hasn’t changed this. “If you’re not married, then you are going to be spending a lot of your time socializing,” Scarlet says. Jason says, “There are really only two kinds^pf people in college — the brilliant and the determined.” Even though they are married, Ja son and Scarlet are still active and they do things any dating couple would do. “We are almost like a girlfriend and boyfriend,” Scarlet says. “If, when you get married, you’ve had a good boyfriend-girlfriend relationship, then your marriage is going to be exactly the same,” she says. “Your relationship is not going to change just because you both have wedding rings.” To them, being the youngest mar ried couple at A&M isn’t a real achievement. Jason says, “I’m happy. I’m still myself and she is still herself and I still feel the same way about her. It hasn’t changed anything.” 99 s coupon before orders | Tin any other offer I • s coupon thruOd.31' a Quantities Unlimited! 99 -'uupon before ordennd |p Ft any other offer. .. ► coupon thru Oct. 31' Quantities Unlimited! Burger of a Deluxe Jitotart*** | The $ 149 Sportster modem. It brings your school’s mainframe computer into your room. Get CompuServe® IntroPak—a *40 value—Free! A Sportster 1200 bps modem connects your Apple. IBM-compatible or almost any computer to the world. So instead of going to the university computer center during regular hours, you can access the mainframe computer anytime. Right from your room. You can write or revise your term papers. Communicate with bulletin board services. Access libraries. Or even submit your assignment to your instructor using your campus E-mail network. All at around 120 characters per second. The compact, dependable Sportster i •- —/ modem is made by USRobotics, one of \ | 1 America’s leading manufacturers for over 10 \ years. So this is no toy. It's a competitive tool - for students who want to work smarter, not just harder. At your college bookstore or call for name of nearest dealer. I-BOO-DIAL-USR.e* 58 In Illinois, call 312-982-5001 g:i f \\ i /) fi Wvj— Hobotics The Intelligent Choice In Data Communicatlona HURRICANE 5 OFFICE SUPPLY & PRINTING 1800 Texas Avenue S. College Station, TX. PFAFTING SUPPLIES COMPUTER PAPER NAME PLATES NAME TAGS ENGRAVING BINDING FREE DELIVERY DISCOUNT PRICES COPIES 3 ota • • • • • Dorm Refrigerators virtual guarantee of musical excellence."—THE WASHINGTON STAR Only your season ticket to OPAS 15 guarantees you seats to these magical pefor- mances. Order yours today! Two convenient ways to order your tickets; 1. Order by phone, 845-1234. Charge to VISA or MasterCard, OP 2. Request an order form from the MSC Box Office Music Series Zone 1 Zone 2 Zone 3 Regular $95.00 $76.00 $61.00 Student $81.00 $65.00 $55.00' •Special two-for-one discount available for Texas A&M : students. For a limited time. Texas A&M students may buy two Zone 3 MSC OPAS season tickets (Music Series only) for the price of one. Sorry, MSC Box Office only. two-for-one orders accepted in person with fee slip at the Theatre Series Zone 1 Zone 2 Zone 3 Regular $103.00 $ 85.00 $ 63.00 Student $ 90.00 $ 75.00 $ 57.00 Combined Series Zone 1 Zone 2 Zone 3 Regular $188.00 $153.00 $119.00 Student $154.00 $130.00 $100.00 Programs and performance dates subject to change without notice. We regret there will be no exchanges or refunds. MSC Opera and Performing Arts Society J.c 'lemorial Student Center • Texas AfirM Cniversitx • Box J-l • College Station TX 77844-9081