The Battalion. (College Station, Tex.) 1893-current, October 19, 1987, Image 4

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    L
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TEXAS A &M UNIVERSITY
HSPR 2 MEETING
High School Public Relations and Recruitment
Come see how you can represent A&M
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Monday, October 19 at 5:30 p.m.
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Page 4/The Battalion/Monday, October 19,1987
Lead dancer Warped
for Soviet ballet
seeks asylum
DALLAS (AP) — He couldn’t
speak English, but a lead dancer for
tne Moscow Ballet sought out a
stranger near his Dallas hotel and
“somehow communicated” that he
wanted to contact American offi
cials, police said.
Andrey Ustinov is seeking politi
cal asylum in the United States, fed
eral officials said. Dallas police Sgt.
Gene Summers said the person he
approached Thursday evening un
derstood the dancer and contacted
the FBI.
Ustinov slipped out of the hotel
after telling his roommate he
wouldn’t join him on the first bus to
the troupe’s last of three perfor
mances in Dallas but instead would
take a second shuttle after dinner,
Summers said.
Waldo
I WAGO-
lor the rep
Strike-ton
by Kevin Thai I hopefuliv
C.0Q-* SIGHTED WALDO ON
THE TIME-SCOPE J HE IS
STILL ALIVE BUT LOST
IN THE DARK AGES.
The FBI picked him up after re-
llfr
ceiving a calf from the person he ap-
:ne
proached, Summers^ said. The per-
ffic
son was not identified, the officer
said.
The Moscow Ballet’s official trans
lator said Ustinov, said to be in his
early 30s with a wife and child in the
Soviet Union, was enamored with
life in the United States and seemed
ready to defect.
“He was really, really interested in
the things Americans said,” Alexan
der Orlov of Fort Worth said.
THE TIME MACHINE
WAS DAMAGED AFTER
LANDING ON THE BLACK
KNIGHTj NO HOPE OF
WALDO EMEU RETURNING.
THE KING GRANTED
WALDO KNIGHTHOOD
SINCE THEY THINK HE
KILLED THE BLACK KNIGHT
HOORAY
for sir i
waldoic:
/M'
ho
Joe Transfer
The people with the troupe said
they almost could tell Ustinov was
ready to defect, Orlov said. “He had
a look in his eye,” he said. “He really
liked it here.”
Summers, who took the initial
missing person report on Ustinov
from the Soviets Thursday night,
said neither he nor they ever men-
tioned defection.
O.K.Ags! I'm Crazy Willy! Wt
60TTA60THOUGH A LITTLE TKAWIU6
5EFDK.E WE C^UVm YOU LOOSE
[WHdTyOU SIM6, IT'S bEST IFTOU
UAUDSUDt DOWN,
“I didn’t ask and they didn’t ask,”
he said. “It was clear to me he had
defected.”
The Moscow Ballet, making its de
but in the United States, is in the
midst of a 21-city U.S. tour.
revious Sa
was the
And remember.to afpwi
PRESSURE TO ALL OJft
60CUT 46S'
ame for
! eplacemen
layers tha
asqueradi
all team fc
.the season.
And get
showed up.
The real
right, ba
ncing 34-1
Baylor, a
&M trout
toad, kept 1
totally destr
How com
ation?
I • The B
eght first
A&M’s 27.
1 • The
5£ yards
; A&M’s 310.
| • The Bi
to the ball
minutes an<
to A&M’s fn
I Figures d
■ True, the
2|1 in the
only had 8
least the pas
of coming a
Bucky Rid
tions on fiv
Lance Pavl;
iijgly, comp
■ Rnior Crai
Symphony orchestra opens
season with concert at A&M
By Tom Reinarts
Music Reviewer
On Saturday evening the Brazos
Valley Symphony Orchestra, com
prised mainly of local singers and
musicians, opened its fourth concert
season with a splendid performance
at a nearly full Rudder Auditorium.
The orchestra, which was led by
Franz Anton
Review
Krager, a lec
turer for the
Department of
Philosophy and
Humanities at Texas A&M, be
began
the performance with Beethoven’s
“Overture to Egmont” and then
moved on to the highlight of the eve
ning, Beethoven’s Ninth Symphony
in D minor.
The orchestra was joined by
mezzo-soprano Virginia Dupuy, so
prano Lauren Sheeler, tenor Mi
chael Lipe, baritone Earl Coleman
and the Brazos Valley Symphony
Chorus led by Virginia Babikian.
Dupuy is a member of the Texas
Commision of the Arts and has been
featured on performances aired on
public television and radio. Sheeler
is a research associate for A&M’s De
partment of Veterinary Anatomy.
Lipe is the director of opera the
ater at Colorado State University
and Coleman is coordinator of the
voice and opera division at Memphis
State University.
Krager, who has performed and
conducted on most continents, led
the orchestra through a spirited and
truly enjoyable performance that re
ceived an equally spirited standing
ovation from most members of the
audience. __
If the rest of the season proves as
successful as the opening Saturday,
this should be a good year for the
Brazos Valley Symphony Orchestra.
New device keeps DWI offenders
from starting cars when drinking
FORT WORTH (AP) — If you’re convicted of driv
ing while intoxicated in Texas, you can be ordered to
install a device in your car that makes it impossible to
start it if you’ve been drinking.
Some Texas judges are praising the device, devel
oped by a Colorado company and used under a new law
as a condition of probation in DWI cases where the of
fender is allowed to drive for occupational purposes.
But some critics object to its cost — about $500 — and
contend it could be misused.
About the size of a citizens band radio, the device
goes under the dashboard of an automobile belonging
to a convicted drunken driver. Before he starts the car,
the, driver must blow into a tube that leads to a breath
analyzer.
If the analyzer detects an excessive blood alcohol
level — usually .02 or the equivalent of drinking a single
beer — the car won’t start. Under Texas law, a driver is
considered drunk if his blood alcohol level exceeds .10.
Although the law — which went into effect Sept. 1 —
is still so new the Department of Public Safety has not
issued regulations for it, judges in Tyler, New Braun
fels and Dallas already are using it.
The device is made by Guardian Interlock Systems
Inc. of Denver, which also manufactures home arrest
units — ankle bracelets that transmit a radio signal that
tells if an offender has moved out of a certain area.
Jeff Tryon, a Guardian marketing manager based in
Euless, said the ignition device is an additional proba
tion, too. “For years, judges had to weigh whetner to
gram or deny an occupation license to a drunk driver,”
he said.
“This is an opportunity to grant occupation licenses
while protecting the public,” he said.
Invention
lessens he
in
LUBBOCK (AP)- ^ Aggies.
field goal a
bui he still
botched fie
down.
Fresh mat
who contim
son, gainec
tempts and
The game a
Lewis and
Woodside b
IWoodsidi
on 13 carri
passes for 2
La
By T
he Tex
stance invented by add
kering in his garagetkl
eliminates heat fromdrij
milling metals can
change the metals indd
cials of a company tlia:|
market it said.
Potential uses for if j
fluid range from fifcf]
transformers to cool
shields of a space oral j
ing the earth’s atmospl
dotherm Inc. officials
Kenneth Sanders is i?! still missing
for the new firm and- ference win
the establishment of if® The Lad
sales headquarters in | first win w
Sanders said the locaMj Friday nigf
firm’s research labor®! iti Waco,
manufacturing plant
decided. tj.The Bea
The substance was 1 gies 16-14,
1982 by a Austin-artij left r y, e [ ac
who was workingwitT'l cord overa
in his garage when he:f| Southwest
drilling fluid, Sanders | is 1-2 in the
chemist mixed some (’T. The Lad
produce what he befej Coac h A1 G
than other <
an adequate substituted
. But the new fluid
ing properties not ass#
traditional drilling"
most no heat was pi
; .
drilling, he said.
“Think about the®? I
of that — no heat fro®
milling,” Sanders toU
bock A valanche-Joutf-
will mean a reduction
tion costs for altnosi
product.”
^
KAPPA SIGMA
presents the
is h
his
troi
a
or
Of
Diplomat'
2nd Annual Thrash for Diabetes Bash
7 p.m. Thursday Oct. 22,1987 at the Parthenon
with chances to win prizes from:
BODY DESIGN POST OAK FLORIST NEIL’S DELI
MAZZIO’S PIZZA TEXAS BODY ITS TOURS AND TRAVEL
EL COMAL MEXICAN RESTAURANT
Tickets at MSC, from any Kappa Sig or at the door, $5 donation, all
proceeds to benefiet A.D.A.
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