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About The Battalion. (College Station, Tex.) 1893-current | View Entire Issue (Oct. 8, 1987)
POSTGAME HIGHUGHTS. l?ALUABLE'COUPOr i FREE HHHLM Buy any size Original Round pizza at regular price, get identical pizza FREE! OPEN LATE YELL PRACTICE! Prkt varies depending on six« and number of toppfnga ordered Valid wtth coupon at participating Little Caesar*. Carry Out Only. Expires Nov. 12, 1987 B-Th-lO-8 lltde Geanos Pfasm TWO PIZZAS Large 3ze FtaasI with Cheese & | plus tax 2 items Reg. $11.55 J Extra items and extra cheese available at additional cost. Vafld wtth I coupon at participating little Caesars. One coupon per customer. ■ Carry Out Only ROCK & ROLL and MOVIE POSTER SALE ALL THE LATEST POSTERS Rock and Roll: U2 The Cure REM Pink Floyd New Order other British bands Mon.-Thurs., Oct. 5-8, 9:30-5:30 Friday, Oct. 9, 9:30-4:00 MSC Main Hallway OPEN HOUSE & TOURS of the newly renovated Michel T. Halbouty Geosciences Building Saturday, October 10, 1987 11:00 A.M. to 1:00 P.M. before the Univ. of Houston Game Sponsored by: Department of Geology Department of Geophysics See the restored exterior, main lecture hall and lobby along with the totally renovated remainder of the building. On Sportswear at ShellenbergePs GUYS! Duckhead Pants Only $2.2.50 Regularly $32.50 for pleated and $28.50 for plain front. Duckhead Pants a 100% cotton twill in khaki, olive yrey, hunter. charcoal, navy. stiellenberger's r ">* Men v and Women % Apparel 520 University Dr. E Hurry Good TTiurudy, Friday & Saturday only-October 8,9 & 10 GIRLS! I Buy one skirt, | 1 v get the second one at Vz price! Includes entire stock of new fall skirts in twill, corduroy, cot tons and wool in solids, plaids and prints. stieilenbergers 520 University Dr. E Hurry! Good Friday S Saturday only - October 8,9 & 10 only - October 8,9^10 Page 4fThe Battalion/Thursday, October 8, 1987 Illegal aliens sue attorney for false acts SAN ANTONIO (AP) — A prom inent immigration attorney has been named in a f 1 million lawsuit that he jeopardized the residency status of nine illegal aliens who paid him, but never received help, another attor ney charged Wednesday. Ruben Montemayor, 58, a certi fied immigration law specialist and attorney since 1961, is accused of engaging in false, misleading and deceptive acts in violation of the Texas Deceptive Trade Practices- Consumer Protection Act. Attorney Pete Torres, who filed the suit on behalf of the nine plain tiffs, said Wednesday that Monte mayor took $1,500 from the nine but never represented them. Torres said four of the nine were deported, but have returned to the United States and their eligibility sta tus now may be in question. Montemayor contends that his former clients misunderstood what he agreed to do. Montemayor is a former U.S. Im migration and Naturalization Serv ice examiner and a former member of Texas Board of Corrections. He also was recommended to President Jimmy Carter in 1979 by Sen. Lloyd Bentsen, D-Texas, as an immigra tion commissioner. Valid: Noon today Sunset Today: 7:01 p.m. Sunrise Friday: 7:23 a.m. The suit, filed Sept. 25, accuses Montemayor of “unconscionable ac tions.” Montemayor said he began rep resenting the nine clients on immi gration matters between 1981 and 1983. Like other immigration clients, the nine received a form letter stat ing Montemayor would represent them in the event they were arrested as illegal immigrants. Montemayor said he had proc essed about 60 cases, but the nine were not among those because they never came back to him once the new immigration law was passed last year. The new law allows illegal aliens in the country before Jan. 1, 1982, the opportunity to apply for resi dency if they have the proper docu mentation. Map Discussion: Rain showers will be scattered from the lower Great Lakes and upper Ohio Valley to New Jersey and New England. Mostly sunny skies will prevail across the rest of the nation. Widely scattered rain show'ers will accompany the low pressure system over southwestern Minnesota and the associated frontal systems. Forecast: Today. Sunny and warm with a high temperature of 86 degrees and winds east-southeasterly at 7 to 12 rnph. Tonight: Clear and mild with a low temperature of 57 degrees and southeasterly winds at 3 to 7 mph. Friday Fair to partly cloudy and warmer with a high temperatureof83 degrees and w inds south-southeasterly near 10 mph. Weather Fact: Isobar: A line of equal or constant pressure; an isopletli of pressure, it most often refers to a line drawn through all pointsof equal mean-sea-level pressure on surface charts. The values are in units and tens of millibars. For example, the “24“ isobar around the high over Georgia on today’s map represents the 1024.0 millibar mean-sea- level isopleth. Prepared by: Charlie Brenton Staff Meteorologist A&M Department of Meteorology State Fair to feature exhibit from Sea World, acrobats DALLAS (AP) — The 101st State Fair of Texas opens Friday with a splashy Sea World exhibit, pefor- mances of “South Pacific” and the return of a popular Chinese acro batic troupe. With its Texas-shaped swimming pool. Sea World sets a nautical theme for this year’s fair, enhanced by the national touring company production of Rodgers and flam- merstein’s “South Pacific.” The mu sical, starring Robert Goulet, opens Tuesday in Fair Park Music Hall. “The biggest new attraction is a huge exhibit from Sea World,” Wayne Gallagher, the fair’s exec utive director, said. “It’s a major ex hibit from its new park in San Anto nio, which opens next year.” Sea World will have its own mari time musical centered around its Texas pool, complete with dancing water and prancing performers be fore a backdrop of the Alamo. Attendance at this year’s fair is ex pected to be about 1 million less than last year, which was Texas’ long-run ning Sesquicentennial fair, drawing 3.9 million people, the largest ever, Gallagher said. But the Sesquicentennial edition had a 31-day run, compared to this year’s 17-day fair, Gallagher said. “We expect somewhere between 2.5 million to 2.9 million people this year,” he said, noting that weekday admission prices have been reduced $1 to attract more fair-goers. Admission is $3 for adults and $1 for children Monday through Fri day. Senior citizens get in free on Tuesdays. Saturday and Sunday ad missions are $5 and $3, he said. The Chinese acrobats were a fa vorite among the record crowds at last year’s fair. So this year, the Shanghai Acrobatic Troupe, the top-ranked acrobats from the Peo ple’s Republic of China, will perform daily in a specially made tent seating 2,000 — twice the capacity of last year, Gallagher said. The fair, which continues through Oct. 25, also features the Texas-Oklahoma football classic this Saturday; the annual high school band Parade of Champions; the tra ditional slate of concerts, exhibits, parades, livestock and farm animals; and the Midway with the Texas Star ferris wheel. Daily attendance averaged 140,000 people last year, but only six fairgoers were victims of crime on a given day, Dallas police said. “For 31 days, Fair Park was the safest place in Dallas,” Deputy Police Chief R.L. Schifelbein said. “We lit- f€ £ A bill t( eraliy cut down on the opportumi' ommittee i for crime to be committed." ■ student \ Eight more officers will beaddfW&M Boai to the larger force that madethefei Sente d to quicentennial fair one ofthesafesi»B ? ednesda\ years, Schifelbein said. II The bill [then assign Last year an extra 65 officers»'w|f°nimittee put on the fair patrol after a surge (Weaker of crime at the 1985 fair, he said. Iii p it) hably u ported crime dropped from 22"t<’Senate for fenses — including two murdersasP'v three rapes — two years ajp loli® Hays saic offenses — no rapes or slayings-i 3 |Wl serve a 1986. Rnts and t Capt. Dwight Walker, whoisl#*)le studen ing Schifelbein coordinate statefafeents’ conc< security, said, “Last year sho«iPpportunity what we could do if we haveenoiiw be preser resources.” ■ough the This year, 106 uniformed offef will patrol the fairgrounds whielil officers will be assigned to therf meter of Fair Park, police said. 1 Six community service offal also wall be working near tl*| fair grounds to ensure that pttf parking lots charge no morefc the legal limit of $4.50 per dap said. “What we’re going for is ® formed-officer visibility,” bein said. “People are p smiling, uniformed police just about everywhere they turn. kuire a st exc lesti CONOCO INC. PETROLEUM PRODUCTS, NORTH AMERICA DALLAS pefore the g r OL inch took. ■ Deputy C Bnment, v Reparation Rations to c ■ It’ll be jt law, wb isdemean* Pedestria MANAGEMENT DEVELOPMENT PROGRAM All December and May Graduates of the COLLEGE OF BUSINESS are invited to attend a presentation/reception on career opportunities with PP,NA DATE OCTOBER 8, 1987 XiMP- 6:00 - 8:00 P.M. PLACE• 231 MEMORIAL STUDENT CENTER Degrees Sought BS/BA/BBA- Finance, Economics, Management MBA (A