The Battalion. (College Station, Tex.) 1893-current, April 01, 1988, Image 4

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    / It out in
The Battalion
Classified
Hide Your Stare
from the Glare
Don’t want to Lose
What you love to Use!
Sunglasses $5.00
April 1st in Blocker
Sponsored by Off Campus Aggies
Page 4The Battalion/Friday, April 1, 1999
MEAT SCIENCE AND TECHNOLOGY CENTER
DEPARTMENT OF ANIMAL SCIENCE
APRIL SPECIALS!!
We will be open the following Saturdays:
April 9th 9:00 am to 2:00 pm PARENTS WEEKEND
April 16th 9:00 am to 2:00 pm
April 23rd 9:00 am to 2:00 pm
April 30th 9:00 am to 2:00 pm
BEEF SIDES (custom cut, wrapped, frozen)
Avg. weight: 300 to 400 lbs; Sold on hanging weight basis.
BEEF HINDQUARTERS (custom cut, wrapped, frozen)
Avg. weight: 145 to 195 lbs; Sold on hanging weight basis.
LEAN GROUND BEEF PATTIES 2 lbs. package
QUARTER-POUND PATTIES 10 lbs. per box
HALF-POUND PATTIES 12 lbs. per box
LEAN GROUND BEEF (2 Ib./pkg.)
40 LB. BOX
$1.25 PER LB.
$1.45 PER LB.
$1.69 PER LB.
$1.49 PER LB.
$1.49 PER LB.
$1.49 PER LB.
$1.19 PER LB.
$.79 PER LB.
LAMB SHOULDER ROASTS (whole, bone-in)
40 LB. BOX
BEEF STEAKS AND ROASTS — EXTRA TRIM AND BONELESS
BEEF RIBEYE STEAKS $4.29 PER LB. (Reg. $5.09)
BEEF TENDERLOIN STEAKS $4.69 PER LB. (Reg. $5.19)
BEEF WHOLE BRISKETS $1.69 PER LB. (Reg. $1.99)
BEEF TENDERLOIN ROASTS $4.29 PER LB. (Reg. $5.00)
Oth«r Beef, Lamb, Pork, Sausage, Dairy products and farm fresh eggs are available. Prices effective while supplies last or through April 30, 1988. We are open
for business Monday through Friday from 9:00 a.m. to 6:00 p.m. We are located on the West Campus between the Kleberg Center and the Horticulture/Forest
Science Building. (Phone: 845-5651).
BRING YOUR PARENTS TO THE
1988 ^MSC VARIETY SHOW
GOTTA .
*•/
PARENTS' WEEKEND
Friday, April 8, 1988 7:30 PM
RUDDER AUDITORIUM
EMCEE: EDDY STRANGE
TICKETS AVAILABLE AT THE MSC BOX OFFICE AND AT ALL TICKETRON OUTLETS
$4.00 AND $5.00
CALL BATTALION CLASSIFIED 845-2611
For FAST Results
3 officers fired
after man says
he was beaten
HOUSTON (AP) — Three patrol
officers were fired from the Hous
ton Police Department for allegedly
beating a prisoner last year on the
city’s northeast side, records show.
The man who was alleged beaten,
Jimmy Precella, 28, said Tuesday
that three officers repeatedly struck
him with nightsticks and flashlights.
Precella said the officers — Hu
bert L. Watson, Edward B. Robinson
Sr. and Jeffrey K. Sparks — also
cursed him during the alleged attack
on Sept. 25, 1987.
The officers were fired Friday by
Assistant Police Chief Dennis Store-
mski, head of the department’s field
operations command.
On Tuesday, the three officers
appealed the dismissals through the
city’s Civil Service Commission.
In papers filed with the commis
sion, Storemski said Precella was
beaten by the officers after he was
stopped and given three traffic tick
ets.
A week earlier, Watson had ar
rested Precella on a charge of as
saulting his wife — a charge later
dismissed, Storemski said.
During the earlier incident, while
en route to the City Jail, Precella “al
legedly cut the backseat of the patrol
car,” Storemski said.
In the documents, Storemski said
the trio took the prisoner to a nearby
parking lot and beat him.
“While it is possible that not all
three officers actually struck Mr.
Precella, they were all present and
would have been aware of the activ
ities of the other officers,” he wrote.
“Each officer has been untruthful
because each officer has expressly
denied any mistreatment of the pris
oner,” he wrote.
Director lives
despite failure
to raise money
for ‘goddess’
hat’s
Friday
AGGIE HOSTESSES: Applications are due for those wanting to applyforh
ess by noon today on the ninth floor of Rudder Tower.
LATTER-DAY SAINTS STUDENT ASSOCIATION: CliHord Whettem
at the sandwich seminar at noon at the Institute Building. There also willbei|
LDSSA council meeting at 3 p.m. at the building.
A&M AMIGA USER GROUP: will show rays tracing animation on a |
computer from 8 a.m. to 3 p.m. today in the Zachry lobby and at 2 p.m.
in 104C Zachry.
INTERVARSITY CHRISTIAN FELLOWSHIP: will meet at 7 p m. in3011
to go see the Jesus film together.
CAMPUS CRUSADE FOR CHRIST: will meet at 7:30 p.m. in 108 HarringKr ; |
watch the Jesus film.
Saturday
DAVIS-GARY HALL: will have their weekly “let’s go get drunk and pickupgi
meeting at 8:30 p.m. at the Dixie Chicken.
A&M TELEVISION EVANGELISTS: will confess to various indecent aasj
their meeting at midnight in the Rumpus Room of the Silk Stocking Lounge;]
Highway 6.
THE PAKISTAN CLUB: will have an annual dinner and a Pakistan Days
bration at 7 p.m. in 145 MSC.
Sunday
ALPHA PHI OMEGA: will have a pledge meeting at 7 p.m. and an s
meeting at 8 p.m. in 701 Rudder.
Monday
NATIONAL ENGINEERING SOCIETY: Manuel M Davenport, profess®
former department head of the philosophy department, will speak asij
“Ethics" at 7 p.m. in 103 Zachry.
PSI CHI/PSYCHOLOGY CLUB: Dr. Simpson will speak about the honors
gram at 7 p.m. in 510 Rudder.
SIGMA IOTA EPSILON: Professor Reed will speak at 7:30 p.m. in 105Blow
ACADEMIC AFFAIRS COMMITTEE: Dean Chenoweth from the enginer
department will lead an open discussion “Cheating: What Are Your Scrupled
at noon in the main lobby of Zachry Engineering Center.
AGGIE PARTNERS FOR SPECIAL OLYMPICS: will have a volunteer
from 10 a.m. to 3 p.m. in the MSC hallway through Friday. Club memben^^ w OI1
meet at 7 p.m. in 267 G Rollie White to discuss the planning progress■
Special Ofympte*.
GREEK WEEK 1988: will sponsor Greek Night Out at the Zephyr Clulm? ■ )Se p l1
Edge with drink specials for all members wearing their Greek letters.Dwi" The
be a banner judging contest from 1 p.m. to 3 p.m. at all chapter houses Mw
is “Letter Day” for all Greek members.
Sevei
roless
ome t
reat V
Itudies
.urn M
The
601 Ru
Items for What's Up should be submitted to The Battalion, 216 Reedh
We only publish the name and phone number of the contact if the fie 5
looking. What's Up is a Battalion service that lists non-profit events art*
ities. Submissions are run on a first-served, first-come basis. There is no f
antee an entry will run. If you have questions, especially on April Fooisii
please don’t bother to call the newsroom at 845-3315.
nan
EL PASO (AP) — Pete Duarte still
lives, even though he raised only 40
percent of the $500,000 he wanted
to raise last year for the La Fe Clinic
he directs.
Duarte, taking a cue froiir evange
list Oral Roberts, said last April 1
that the Aztec goddess Xochitlizquatl
told him to walk into the desert and
never come back if he didn’t raise
the half-million dollars for the clinic
during a 40-day fund drive.
Xochitlizquatl spared Duarte,
though he came up $300,000 short.
This year, to be safe, Duarte quipped
that he planned to offer three pup
pies for sacrifice in a tongue-in-
cheek ceremony at sunrise Friday at
a site overlooking El Paso and Ciu
dad Juarez, Mexico.
The 50-year-old director of the
southside health clinic for the poor
planned to don purple jogging
shorts, run to Lookout Point on
Franklin Mountain at the crack of
dawn, chant to “Xochi,” as he calls
the Aztec god, offer three white
puppies for sacrifice and plant corn
on the rocks, said Domingo Nick
Reyes, a clinic administrator.
The corn-planting is done in hope
that Xochitlizquatl — goddess of fer
tility, flowers, health and good cheer
— will bring prosperity to the 20-
year-old clinic, Reyes said Thursday.
The 6 a.m. ceremony, also featur
ing drummers and dancers, has its
serious side: publicizing this year’s
40-day fund drive in which the clinic
again hopes to raise $500,000 for
items such as examining tables, wait
ing chairs and medical equipment.
The clinic raised almost $200,000
last year, almost all from corpora
tions.
As they did last year, contributors
will receive a “green card” to Aztlan,
the promised land of Aztec.
Kay:
• Lightning
“ - Fog
• •
- Rain
*★ - Snow
- lea Pellets
^ m Rain Shower
Freezing
Com
Sunset Today: 6:43 p.m.
Sunrise Friday: 6:12 a.m.
By
Map Discussion: The snowstorm coming out of the Central Rockies will cor#'
to be active as it moves into the plains. The upper-level low pressure systerT >
quite vigorous and a moderate to strong inflow of low level moisture fromj
will enhance the snow situation in the plains and bring shower and thundersli)'^
from central Texas to the Ohio Valley to New England.
mute
uss ca
Forecast:
lianru
Jruitmi
Today and Tonight. Cloudy and mild. High temperature 73 degrees. South^it Wadle
10 to 18 mph. Probability of rain is 40 percent. Low temperature Saturdayn» m Red Gros
of 53 degrees. Hsthe/
Saturday. Overcast Saturday morning with a Pacific cold front passingBryaH' E ‘ t!
College Station during the morning and a slight decrease in the cloudiness
Saturday evening. Winds southerly at 10 to 18 mph ahead of the front, t
northwesterly Saturday afternoon. High temperature near 70 midday,thence^
in the evening. Probability of rain will be 20 percent through early afternoon
Prepared by: CharlieBJ
Staff Metei '
A&M Department of Metet
There’s more to Easter than the wur
Easter Bunny.
Come See
JESUS
A film about the life of Christ
it’s FREE!
Friday April 1st
7:30 p.m.
Harrington 108
Sponsored by Campus Crusade for Christ