Problem Pregnancy? •We [isten, We core, VVe ficlp •Free Pregnancy Tests •Concerned CounseCors Brazos Valley Crisis Pregnancy Service We’re Local! Sandestin Beach Hilton Destin, Florida 3620 E. 29th Street (next to Medley's Gifts) 24 hr. fwtCine 823-CARE Springbreak *88 •269.°° TOTAL PRICK* 2.50 ADMISSION 1. Any Show Before 3 PM 2. Tuesday - All Seats 3. Mon-Wed - Local Students With Current ID s 4. Thur - KORA "Over 30 Nite" PACKAGE INCLUDES: 1 6 DAYS ON THE BEACH 2 5 NIGHTS HOTEL FOUR TO A ROOM 3 2 BEACH PARTIES WITH UVE BANDS 4 1 BREAKFAST/2 BUFFET DINNERS * BREAKFAST ON ARRIVAL DAY * FLORIDA LUAU BUFFET ON THE BEACH * GREAT BARBEQUE BUFFET BY THE POOL 5 ROUNDTRIP TRANSPORTATION BY An CONDITIONED, RESTROOM EQUIPPED. MOTORCOACH • COMPLETE PACKAGE WITHOUT ROUNDTTOP TRANSPORTATION 9 199, 00 SCHULMAN 6 2002 E. 29th 775-2463 Doug Hill Travel 8144 Walnut Hill Lane • Walnut Glen Tower • Suite 171 Dallas. TX 75231 • 214-7393300 in Texas 1-600-52&4100 • TELEX 79*949 FOR KEEPS pg-13 PLANES, TRAINS & AUTOMOBILES r TH S DOLLAR DAYS $ MRTY DANCMG pg- 7:1« HELLO AGAIN pg BABY BOOM pg-is 7:1» jm PRINCESS BRIDE pg 7:2* •DENOTES DOLBY STEREO PLAZA 3 226 Southwest Pkwy 693-2457 YOUR Word Protessing, Editing & More! 693-1266 ‘FATAL ATTRACTION r 7:20 ‘GOOD MORKMI VIETNAM r ‘MALI STREETr 7:15 MANOR EAST 3 Manor East Mai I 823-8300 ‘THREE MEN & A BABY pg 7:10 9:35 COUCH TRIP r 7:20 9:40 OVERBOARD pq 7:25 9:45 Special Rates Through February 10 R£sum£s: $5.00/page All other work: 20% off (Limited to 10 typed pages. Regular discounts not applicable with this offer.) All work printed on a laser printer. SING AND TRAVEL!! CENTURY SINGERS HOLDING AUDITIONS FOR: 2 TENORS 2 ALTOS For info 845-5974 Auditions: Feb. 5-6 OPEN REHEARSAL: Feb. 5 MSC FLAGROOM cut along dotted line and present at time of purchase $1.00 OFF! NO-WAIT LUNCH BUFFET $2,991 ■Pizza •SpaGatti -Salad Bar -Kids under6 FREE!* with coupon Save $1,00 off reg price! Served (11) to (2) everyday. Not valid with any other coupons or special otters. Good only at participating Mr. GattiY Price shown is per person. Coupon may be used by 1 or 2 people. Offer Expires 3-31-88 268-BEST The best pizza In town. h'—K-/ Skaggs Centerl Digital Audio EXCHANGE New & Used Compact Discs Happy Spring Semester We pay cash for Used Compact Discs. For more information call the CD Hot Line 846-2695, or come by the new location at 3912 Old College Rd. <8- Transmission • Clutch Drive Shaft • 4X4 Front Wheel Drive Full Service-Import-Domestic ryan Drive Train Visit our location across from the Chicken Oil Co. 3605 S. College call us 268-AUTO Valentine Personals Put Your Heart On the Line in our Valentine Love to be pub! For $5 00 someone special. Co^e^by the/E^iglish An nex, Mond^SiimFg^ay, 9 a.m.-4 p.m. to place yours. , nf i n ■?>*** ** ! • <•* Page 4/The Battalion/Wednesday, February 3, 1988 Blaze destroys trailer, kills nine women, children SILVERTON (AP) — Two women and six children died early Tuesday when a faulty propane heater ignited a fire that engulfed their mobile home and trapped them inside, officials said. The women’s husbands escaped and were able to pull a boy and a girl to safety by breaking out a window, James R. Edwards, chief of the Bris coe County Volunteer Fire Depart ment, said. The four were hospital ized in stable condition. Edwards said firefighters found the trailer in flames when they ar rived shortly after midnight at the remote wheat and cattle ranch about 60 miles southeast of Amarillo in the Texas Panhandle. “By the time we arrived, there was nothing we could do but extinguish the fire and recover the bodies,” Ed wards said. Edwards said the two men, who are brothers-in-law, do not speak English and did not have a tele phone in the trailer. He said they broke into another trailer to call someone who then contacted fire fighters. “They indicated the thing just blew and that was it,” Briscoe County Sheriff Dick Roehr said. “They didn’t know what was going on. It just happened and it was all in flames before they realized what was going on.” Roehr said, “We’re convinced it was purely an accident. I suppose we’ll make more inquiries to be abso lutely certain.” The victims included a 25-year- old mother and her five children, her sister-in-law, also 25, and her daughter. The children ranged in age from 5 months to 7 years, and Roehr said some of the bodies were burned beyond recognition. He said the women and children never had a chance to escape. Edwards said firefighters thought all of the victims’ bodies had been re moved by 2 a.m., when seven were recovered. But after speaking with the survivors, they realized the 5- month-old baby’s body was still iti- side the charred trailer, and re moved it at 5:40 a.m. Roehr said Francisco Palacio, 28, and Samuel Davila, 28, escaped with two of Davila’s children. Palacio is a hired hand who lives at the farm, owned by Teddy Dale Hancock, Edwards said. Davila and his family had been visiting Palacio for the past two weeks while Davila looked for a job. The four adults were legal aliens from Mexico and the children had all been born in the United States, Edwards said. Hancock’s daughter, Rhonda Hancock, described the Palacio fam ily as people who were “just trying to make it in Texas” and said they were close-knit and religious, driving a 100-mile roundtrip to attend church in Fairview almost every Sunday. Palacio had worked for Hancock for eight years and had lived on the 3,000-acre ranch since December 1986. “He had access to everything 1 had,” Hancock said. “When I wasn’t home, he could use my home, pick ups and farm equipment. He hadn’t worked for me for eight years for nothing.” The two men and the rescued children, Samuel Davila Jr., 6, and Edna Davila, 4, were hospitalized for smoke inhalation at Swisher Memo rial Hospital in Tulia. They were scheduled to be released Wednes day, Edith Gillham, a hospital nurse, said. What’s up Wednesday INSTITUTE OF INDUSTRIAL ENGINEERS: Marvin Kuers Jr. of Michael’s* speak at 7 p.m. in 203 Zachry. AMERICAN INSTITUTE OF CHEMICAL ENGINEERS: Representativesl[c| Conoco will speak at 6:30 p.m. in 103 Zachry. Job information will be available [ PUBLIC RELATIONS STUDENT SOCIETY OF AMERICA: will meetatSji p.m. in 215 Reed McDonald. STUDENT “Y” YOUTH FUN DAY: will have a mandatory organizational reel ing tor staff and counselors at 7 p.m. in 206 MSC. HILLEL JEWISH STUDENT FOUNDATION: will meet at 11:45 a m. intheMSfl dining hall to have lunch with the rabbi. FELLOWSHIP OF CHRISTIAN ATHLETES: will meet at 6:30 p.m. intheLebej man s lounge. OFF-CAMPUS AGGIES: General and executive members will have theirp<| lures taken at 8 p.m. in the Zachry lobby. CO-OP STUDENT’S ASSOCIATION: will have an organizational meeting;!! p.m. in 352 MSC. TAMU AMATEUR RADIO CLUB: will have an informal meeting andhavenfcf ice classes at 7 p.m. in 350 MSC. New members are always welcome. STUDENTS AGAINST APARTHEID: will hold elections and discuss | the semester at 8:30 p.m. in 507 A-B Rudder. UNITED CAMPUS MINISTRIES: will have an Aggie supper at 6 p.m. alMf Presbyterian Church. GREAT COMMISSION STUDENTS: will have a monthly rally at 7:30pni( 102 Zachry for Christian fun, fellowship and food. TAMU RUSSIAN CLUB: will meet at 6:30 p.m. in 123 Academic andthenwilj| to the Flying Tomato. ECONOMICS SOCIETY: will meet at 7 p m. in 230 MSC New membersarewf| come. AMERICAN SOCIETY OF PERSONNEL ADMINISTRATION: will have its general meeting of the semester at 7 p.m. in 105 Blocker. BAPTIST STUDENT UNION: will have a revival at 10 p.m. in RudderTheate' MSC LITERARY ARTS: is accepting submissions of poetry, prose and grap! art through Feb. 20 for the 1988 Litmus. STUDY ABROAD OFFICE: will meet at 3 p.m. in 501 Rudder to discussree | ing loans for study abroad. HONORS STUDENT COUNCIL: will take pictures for The Aggieland p.m. in the Zachry lobby. AGGIES FOR BARTON: will have an organizational meeting at 8:30p.m.in2:| MSC. EUROPE CLUB: will meet at 10 p.m. upstairs at the Flying Tomato. BAPTIST STUDENT UNION: will have a revival at 7 p.m. in RudderThealer OUTDOOR RECREATION CLUB: will meet to plan upcoming tripsat7pr,| 404 Rudder. Thursday Black leaders try to take down flag from Capitol dome MONTGOMERY, Ala. (AP) — Law officers arrested Alabama NAACP President Thomas Reed and 10 other black leaders on Tues day when they tried to climb a fence around the Capitol to take down the Confederate battle flag flying over the dome. Reed, a state representative from Tuskegee, led a group of several dozen blacks to a driveway gate where Reed talked to state troopers for almost 20 minutes before at tempting to climb the 8-foot high fence. “I consider myself not violating the law of this state,” Reed said. After officers grabbed Reed by the collar and pulled him down from the fence, other members of his group, among them National NAACP board member Emmett Burns, attempted to climb over but also were restrained. “We are under arrest,” state Rep. John Rogers of Birmingham said as he entered the bus. The charges were not immediately known. Earlier, as crowds had gathered for the march sponsored by the NAACP, local and state law enforce ment officers set up barricades and confiscated an ax handle. Reed contends the flag represents racism and oppression and said that if it was not taken down voluntarily he planned to “enter the Capitol grounds and climb to the top of the state Capitol dome and remove the Confederate battle Hag,” He said the banner is resented by blacks and “better-thinking white people.” The NAACP also is campaigning to bring down Confederate battle (lags at statehouses in Alabama and South Carolina, as well as remove Confederate flags from the designs of the Georgia and Mississippi state flags. State officers said they confiscated an ax handle from three youths in a pickup truck during a search, but made no arrests. Capitol security police were under orders from Cov. Guy Hunt not to allow anyone to reach the Capitol, which is undergoing renovation and is surrounded by a locked, chain-link fence. PARENTS WEEKEND COMMITTEE: Remember to nominate your parre:! Parents of the Year. Applications are available in the MSC Student Publicas::J Office and in Sterling C. Evans Library through Friday. SOCIETY OF WOMEN ENGINEERS: will have its first meeting of the sere;;| at 6 p.m. in 105C Zachry. WILEY LECTURE SERIES: will have an information session at 7:30p.m.ii5i’| Rudder. Membership applications are available in 216 MSC. DATA PROCESSING MANAGEMENT ASSOCIATION: Coca-Cola Foods present information on careers in data processing at 7 p.m. in the Ramadalr| penthouse suite. CLASS OF ’89 AND CLASS OF ’90: will meet to discuss class ball preparate| at 7 p.m. in 404 Rudder. LEBANESE STUDENT ASSOCIATION: will meet to discuss InternationalWel at 8:30 p.m. in 404 Rudder. SPEECH COMMUNICATIONS ASSOCIATION: will have a happy hoursoa| at 5 p.m. at the Flying Tomato. INTERNATIONAL BUSINESS ASSOCIATION: will meet at 6 p.m altheRfit| Tomato. INTRAMURALS: will have a team bowling captain’s meeting at 5 pm. iitiE Read. PARAMENIAN STUDENT ASSOCIATION: will meet at 8:30 p.m. in 402But : der. Hems for What's Up should be submitted to The Battalion, 216 ReedMcDorn: no later than three business days before the desired run date. We only pm the name and phone number of the contact if you ask us to do so. W/ia/’slJ!)i| a Battalion service that lists non-profit events and activities. Submissionsm'l on a first-come, first-served basis. There is no guarantee an entry will have questions, call the newsroom at 845-3315. amine Bond set for youth charged Icutor in murder of grandparents Will ney Ke tation frugs i BONHAM (AP) — Bond has been set ai $1 million lor a 17-veai-oId high school student charged with killing his grandparents. Thomas James Slusher was ar raigned Monday in Bonham by Jus tice of the Peace Don Jones and charged with two counts of murder. He was being held in the Fannin County Jail. The Rev. Charles Slusher and his wife Sudie were found by a church member Wednesday in the Bonham First Church ot the Na/.arene. prosec dealers jchool- He urcha officer. And :ooper an St ,, jhool I he teen-ager has lived wil|' lrst ; n couple since his parent's #®eople about three years ago. He " J Kchoo| ■ graduate from Bonham HighSfir in May. .357-caliber Magnum pistol, husband appears to have been at least twice with the same I he teen-ager was anti I hursday by U.S. Gustomsod at the Mexican border in Del Jailer Jim Robinson said the had taken his grand mothers ot Preliminary autopsy results indi cate that Mrs. Slusher was shot in the head, chest and shoulder with a Investigators still have non* for the crimes, but Sheriff Sam' ton said “the teen-ager was a| vated by authority figures.” 2-v AUS’ Police patrol pairs may become permanent 1 in j ; a 2-year gr; fraught site. DALLAS (AP) — Dallas police will patrol in pairs for at least three more weeks and the ar rangement may be made permanent for many officers if the response time stays low, officials said. Police Chief Billy Prince ordered police to pair up a week ago after the shooting of of ficer John Chase, who was alone on patrol Jan. 23 when a homeless man wrestled his service revolver away and shot him in the face three times. Statistics indicate the average response time to emergency and high-priority calls for assistance was just less than 11 minutes during the first two weeks of January, before Prince ordered the two- officer squads. Under the experimental program, the re sponse average was exceeded only on Saturday, when it took patrol officers an average of 1 3 min utes to answer to high-priority calls, such as open buildings, suspicious persons and burglar alarms. Assistant Chief John Driscoll said response times have not increased significantly under the experimental program because, in the past, two officers were sent to most serious calls. “If the figures stay like this, then the review will be favorable,” Driscoll said. “But it’s too early to get a decent reading on response times.” Driscoll, head of the Patrol Division, said the department eventually may assign 80 percent of its patrol officers to two-person squads, a move that would cut by 20 percent the number of cars Autlr patrolling the streets. | to the Prince said the two-officer patrols have ft granclfh officers f eel safer. Kill in ] Prince met with Mayor Annette Strauss his dam City Manager Richard Knight on Monday solve disagreements about the police dff ment. Nicole ( tel whe tee re livj I The teiio we After the Chase shooting, Prince Council criticism of police contributed totlie* |dondav cer’s death. A bus stop crowd watched thebe- less man struggle with Chase and somesbo® “Shoot him, shoot him,” according to witnt? counts. ffie homeless man was shot and killed bf lice after he fired at them. CLINICS AM/PM Clinics Minor Emergencies 10% Student Discount with ID card 3820 Texas Ave. Bryan, Texas 846-4756 401 S. Texas Ave. Bryan, Texas 779-4756 8a.m.-11 p.m. 7 days a week Walk-in Family Practice