Page SAThe Battalion/Friday, October 30, 1987 YESTERDAYS BILLIARDS • DARTS f“ABSOLUTELY WONDERFUL ...A FILM I MAY NEVER FORGET.” —Jeflrey Lyons, SNEAK PREVIEWS, INDEPENDENT NETWORK NEWS STAND] BY ME STAND BY ME STAND BY ME Friday 7:3 0 and 9:45 Saturday 11:00 Rudder Theatre $2.00 ) A NEW ORGANIZATION ON CAMPUS Mentors Messengers: • promote awarness of the Tx A&M Mentors program among students • assist members in their functions For more information contact: James 260-4667, Jill 693-9429, Cheryl & Dian 846-1310, Caroline 46-1671 GET RICH THE HARD WAY Luby’s Cafeterias, Inc., operating cafeterias in Texas, Oklahoma, Arizona, and New Mexico, is looking for 24 people to enter its man agement traininua program in March. To qualify, you must: You will receive: • Be at least 22 years old • $19,200 starting salary • Be willing to relocate •Company funded profit •Have a stable employment sharing/retirement history •Group health, life and •Be college educated or have disability insurance equivalent experience • Relocation expenses •Have little or no food service •Merit raises and experience advancement This is a serious offer by an established and rapidly growing com pany. We invite you to call or send your resume and find out more about us. You will be amazed at the proven earnings potential of a career with Luby’s. Interviewing in your placement center November 11 and 12 or call Tom Youngblood or Wayne Shirley (512) 225-7720 (No collect calls please) or write P.O. Box 33069, San Antonio, Texas 78265 Luby’s Cafeterias, Inc. is listed on the New York Stock Exchange with sales exceeding $240 million last year. Lubys Good food from good people. mar* cafeterias, mc. 2211 re. loop 410, p.o. box now, ban amtomo, texas tssm Lutoy'a la a Raglalawcl Tradamarfc of Lutoy'a CaHlirlai, Inc. Warped by Scott Mo A TIME WHEtf MALICIOUS tS\L APPEARS TO HAUAT US, COMFROh/T vs AMP TE-RROKIZE. VS WITH THE.IK GROTESQUE FACES. A TIME THE MOST PE RVE.RTEJP CHARACTERS of Horror ake loose TO WALK THE MIGHT AND... 0 z^ocx t '-y / y lGR Joe Transfer by Dan 8c Choosing weapons involf sacrifices for some officec ODESSA (AP) — For some police officers, the perfect weapon involves a sacrifice. Odessa police Sgt. Frank Beam forsook concealment when he chose a stainless steel Smith and Wesson .357-caliber Magnum for protection during his days as a patrolman. Although the same gun with a blue-steel finish is less visible at night, especially in such seemingly dangerous conditions as when an of ficer follows an armed suspect down a dark alley, Beam preferred relia bility to concealment. “I got it because I was out in the weather, and it had to operate,” Beaip said. “My life depends upon it.” He explained that stainless steel guns, while more easily seen at night, are less likely to malfunction due to rust from humidity and rain than ones with a blue-steel finish. “It’s a whole system of give and take,” Beam said. “The department sets limitations, but within those lim itations there are myriads of choices. Grip, weight, caliber, finish, all of those things. It’s just personal pref erence.” However, Cpl. Vic Sikes, who car ries a .357-caliber Magnum, said he didn’t sacrifice a thing when he chose his revolver. “Some people consider the weight of carrying this weapon a sacrifice, but I don’t hardly notice it,” Sikes said. “So, no, I don’t think I made any sacrifice on it. I’ll defend it to the death. I like it.” Sikes’ revolver, a blue-steel Smith and Wesson with a 3 Va-inch barrel that weighs close to 3 pounds, re sembles the one he carried for 10 years before it was stolen. “I like the blue-steel because it doesn’t reflect the light as well,” he said. He prefers the short barrel be cause pulling it from the holster is easier. Although it might require more maintenance than a stainless steel weapon, Sikes said cleaning it is a matter of routine rather than incon venience. Police Cpt. John McAhon says of ficers supply their own handguns to “I got it (the gun) because I was out in the weather and it had to operate. My life depends upon it. ” — Odessa Police Sergeant Frank Beam meet department regulations that recjuire lawmen to carry either a .38- cahber special revolver or a .357-cali ber Magnum with barrel lengths be tween 31/2 and 6'/2 inches. Jon Thomas, manager of the Sportsman’s Den in Odessa said re volvers available to officers cost be tween $325 and $400. But some guns, like the Colt Python .357-cali ber Magnum, sell for about $700, he said. He suggested that some officers select a weapon simply from peer pressure. “Police officers are Is I else,” Thomas said. ‘Ill | buddy that he looksiMi i carries a Python, thenWi a Python.” Sgt. Maria Allaire, *81 N with the Odessa Police Hi] 1 for nine years, said sherf I revolver before become | officer, and she purctais ' ' gun upon her fathers ted i tion. “Of course when 16* i here I didn’t bow S ^ \ guns,” Allaire said."M)id H policeman for 35 yean,a f gested Smith and Wesffl 1 “At the time I thoujlii p ting a .38 special, butwk I the option of swappis : kinds of ammo, 1 dtoK | .357. The silver-tip&’- 1 jH needs to do. It has its C* n point. I don’t need to# ij load.” Sikes explained than ; \\ bullet holds more gut? I c ause of its longercasm; 1 i vides greater velocity 2 than a .38-caliber rotml | which may be used ins''' Magnum. Thomas said the insf „ , cers he has sold guns®! I .357-caliber MagnumI which he said usually^ f by security guards. Sikes, who has carrie*' ^ he was 18 years old, saii* i has never fired his tf'- I line of duty, he has ^ ;j‘ the holster many times || Friends develop alternative fa 1 using quail, crawfish for Iive0 MILLER GROVE (AP) — Dodg ing claws and pointed beaks are a way of life for Lee Roy Tipton and Bill Spears. These men are developing an al ternative farm, raising quail and crawfish. Within two years, Spears — who now manages a Burger King restau rant in Sulphur Springs and Tipton, a journeyman pipefitter — expect to quit their current jobs and, with their wives, make their 48 combined acres support both families. About five years ago, the longtime friends and neighbors in Irving de cided to get away from the “rat race” in Dallas and move to the country. They settled on the land they bought near this Hopkins County commu nity and eventually decided to start developing a business. It has been an after-hours project for the last two years, but Spears and Tipton now have their bobwhite quail business in full swing. Spears said, “We raise Northern Jumbo Wisconsin Bobwhite Quail for either live sale or dressed for the table. These quail can be released into the wild or eaten. They are about 50 percent bigger than wild- reared quail.” Raising these birds is similar to chicken farming. An incubator is kept at 101 degrees for 23 days until the thumb-sized fledglings are hatched. Life for the young birds is pro tected after hatching, but there are major pitfalls for the unwary chick. Tipton said, “These birds can be cannibalistic. You can only rear birds hatched at the same time together. If you mix them with older birds, the older birds will attack them.” As the birds approach maturity, they are placed in a large pen that is covered over to keep them from es caping. A waist-high platform is kept in the middle of the pen and the birds develop their wings by flying up to the platform. Even at this stage, there are haz ards to the birds. Tipton said they have to discour age hawks, owls and snakes that try to get an easy meal. The men also have launched into a crawfish business. The rearing of crawfish requires a pond with water about 20 inches deep. Then men put out bales of coastal bermuda hay- the pond as food for®] Tipton said, of crawfish — Louis® 11 ' and Deep River Wfo keep the pool aerate gen), and the temp 1 ] stay below 90 degrees To keep water befo; dug a 16-foot-deep] From the bottom of] cool water is circulate] crawfish pond during s! ' 11 The usual problem] ^ turtles, herons and 1 farmers. Not only are the 11 take advantage of r(l! | duck hunting, buttle | . offer quail hunters so 1 * f their land. The ideal] private bird hunting- quail are released | hunters. The birds’ 11 in the flood plain be - 1 pools. The current era# i.) the first in a series ofk| the men plan to dig® 10-acre lake to prod] ? water in summer fo r ; ponds.