Monday, April 4, 1988AThe Battalion/Page 7 12” Pepperoni $4.20 plus tax valid thru 4-30-88 $3.50 off 16” 2-item pizza PIZZA FAST, FRESH, HOT AND DELIVERED FREE Call 76-GUMBYX 764-8629 Hours Sun-Wed: 11 a.m.-1:30 a.m. Thur-Sat: 11 a.m.-2:30 a.m. Medical School Interviewing Workshop for Premedical Students e " Tuesday, April 5, 1988 7:30 p.m. Lecture Hall # 1, Medical Sciences Bldg. (MSB) ,acor- ocke; linii' nek.?; "CIEE and AYH Present TRAVEL EUROPE On Your OWN! Tuesday Seminar Times and Topics: rr, i Travel Abroad and Work Opportunities 30 - 3:30 p.m. Backpacking Youth Hostels Packing Tips Discount Air fares International I.D. Cards. - Student Discounts Travel Guide Books Train travel/rail passes ^ 12:30 - l:30 p.m. How to Travel Europe on a Shoestring s ponsored by the Aggies Abroad Club 845-0544 Contact Lenses Only Quality Name Brands (Bausch & Lomb, Ciba, Barnes-Hinds-Hydrocurve) $ 79 00 $ 99 00 $ 99 00 pr. *-STD. DAILY WEAR SOFT LENSES pr. *-STD. EXTENDED WEAR SOFT LENSES pr. *-STD. TINTED SOFT LENSES DAILY WEAR OR EXTENDED WEAR SAME DAY DELIVERY ON MOST LENSES Call 696-3754 For Appointment CHARLES C. SCHR0EPPEL, O.D., P.C. DOCTOR OF OPTOMETRY * Eye exam & care kit not included 707 South Texas Ave., Suite 101D College Station, Texas 77840 1 block South of Texas & University id'I' st# -N Life in the fast lane In Advance Author to speak on American West By Sharon Maberry Reporter Pulitzer Prize-winning author William Goetzmann will be at Texas A&M Wednesday and Thursday to give two lectures dealing with the American West. “Dr. Goetzmann is very know- ledgable about the development of the American West,” said Dr. Paul Parrish, associate dean of the College of Liberal Arts. “He is one of the country’s best known scholars in this area.” Goetzmann, a professor at the University of Texas since 1964, will speak Wednesday at 8 p.m. in 601 Rudder on “Western Art as Intellectual History.” This lec ture and slide presentation will focus on the paradoxes of con quest as reflected in Western art. On Thursday at 8 p.m. in 601 Rudder he will speak on the topic “Americans, Exploration, and the Culture of Science,” which will deal with the development of sci ence and technology within the context of American experience. Goetzmann will focus on the relationship between the devel opment of the American West and of science as a culture, Par rish said. Goetzmann won a Pulitzer Prize for his book, “Exploration and Empire: The Role of the Ex plorer and Scientist in the Win ning of the American West, 1800- 1900.” Parrish said, “His best known activity is probably the work he did on the PBS series, ‘The West of the Imagination,’ which ap peared about a year ago. He was the creator and chief script writer of that project.” Goetzmann received his Ph.D. and bachelor’s degree in Ameri can Studies at Yale University, Parrish said. He also received a Fulbright Lectureship at Cam bridge University in England, where he taught from 1967 to 1968. Housing fair aids off-campus students The Texas A&M Off-Campus Center and Off-Campus Aggies will sponsor the fourth annual Housing Fair on Wednesday from 10 a.m. until 4 p.m. in the Rudder Exhibit Hall. “The Housing Fair is an op portunity for property owners, managers, community agencies and other housing services to pre sent information on off-campus living options to students, faculty and staff of Texas A&M Univer sity,” said Erika Gonzalez-Lima, graduate assistant from the Off- Campus Center. Nancy Thompson from the Off-Campus Center said the Housing Fair will provide stu dents with a place to go to obtain needed information. “By consolidating many sources of information like this, we really help people who don’t own cars or can’t get transporta tion to look for apartments in the area,” she said. About 40 apartment com plexes will be represented at the fair along with furniture rental companies, the Bryan and Col lege Station utility companies, the Office of Students’ Attorney, A&M Bus Operations and Uni versity Food Services. This year’s theme is ‘Avoid the Mad Dash,’ Gonzalez-Lima said. Amnesty International head to speak By Cindy Milton Reporter The director of the southern region of Amnesty International will come to Texas A&M Tuesday to talk about torture and political imprisonment. “Man’s Inhumanity to Man: The Issue of Human Rights” will feature Steve Herrick of Amnesty International, USA. Herrick will discuss unjust imprisonment and torture of people throughout the world as a result of certain politi cal and religious beliefs or ethnic- ity. The program will be held Tuesday at 7 p.m. in Rudder Theater. A video called “Stop ping Torture” also will be shown. “The video will include testi monies from former prisoners from Chile, South Korea, South Africa and the Soviet Union who have first-hand experience of tor ture,” Herrick said in a Battalion phone interview. “The focus of the program,” he said, “is on how students and faculty having political freedom can and must speak out for those who cannot.” Amnesty International, a 1977 Nobel Peace Prize winner, is a worldwide organization that sup ports human rights, ensures that all political prisoners are given fair trials and works to stop tor ture and execution in all cases. MSC Great Issues, the sponsor of the program, is a University educational planning committee run by students that presents pro grams during the year on various topics of interest. Tenured UT professor dismissed to cut costs ARLINGTON (AP) — The dimis sal of a tenured professor who taught guitar classes at the Univer sity of Texas-Arlington has caused discord among the faculty and stu dents because such a termination is so rare. Associate Professor Charles Post- lewate was dismissed after teaching at UTA for 10 years in what univer sity officials said was a cost-costing move. Students and faculty members be gan circulating petitions last week supporting the classical guitarist. “I just think that I should have been given due process,” Postlewate said of the elimination of his tenured position late last year. “I haven’t been.” University regents award tenure for outstanding work and as a guar antee of academic freedom from po litical pressure. Harry Beaudry, an English professor and president of the campus chapter of the American Association of University Professors, said the dismissal of a tenured pro fessor is “rare, very rare.” But Gary Ebenserger, chairman of the music department, said Post- lewate’s academic guitar program at tracted too few students — six guitar degree graduates in the last five years. ‘Tt has nothing to do with Charles whatsoever. It’s a fringe area, it’s a luxury. I don’t think we can afford to continue it,” Ebenserger said. Postlewate’s case has drawn the at tention of national professors’ asso ciation members, who have written UTA administrators concerning “a violation of Postlewate’s rights under principles of academic tenure,” according to association spokesman B. Robert Kressler. Postlewate and his colleagues said that administrators should have re tained him to teach several basic mu sic courses, rather than hire part- time instructors as planned. Students and faculty say they will help fight Postlewate’s dismissal. if# jlcf- iri has irck has* ra® It’s who you know. It’s what you drive. It’s how you dress. It’s where you live. It you want to be in the fast lane at A&M, you have to move in the right circle. Parkway Circle. Parkway Circle gives you huge 2 and 3 bedroom floorplans, tw'o full baths, private patios, washer/dryer connections, pool, hot tub, clubhouse with fireplace, shuttle bus and manicured grounds. Why keep up with the Joneses when you can pass them? Move in the right circle. Park wav Circle. \ \ / / / PARKWAV CIRCLE 401 SouihwcM Parkwav 696-6909 University Drive Parkway Circle Southwest Parkway Attorneys offer deal in officer’s hearing FORT WORTH (AP) — Attorneys offered to withdraw some allega tions against a police officer accused of fixing tickets in exchange for le niency by the police chief, a pub lished report says. The offer was made in connection with an administrative hearing that resumes Monday in the firing of the police officer accused of fixing tick ets. Sources told the Fort Worth Star- Telegram in Sunday’s edition that Police Chief Thomas Windham was asked to reduce officer Steve Weav er’s punishment to a suspension and the hearing — and airing of the alle gations — would never occur. Windham, in an interview late last week, confirmed an offer was re ceived from Weaver’s attorney, Rob ert Hasty. “Bob Hasty voiced a threat . . . that he was going to bring out some very damaging testimony,” Wind ham said. “At no time will I be black mailed or extorted . . . They know they have a loser. The testimony so far has totally been supportive of the necessity of firing people like Steve Weaver.” Investigators accused Weaver of fixing three traffic tickets he issued to a plumber who did work at Weav er’s house. At last week’s hearing appealing Weaver’s firing, Officer Maurice Buchholz testified that assistant city attorney Juan Blanco Jr.’s instruc tion at the police academy included lessons on how to fix traffic tickets for friends, relatives and others. Blanco had denied the allegations. Buchholz and two other officers had testified that Fort Worth police routinely fixed traffic tickets for ac quaintances. Summer Storage * 45 00 (and up) Total Rent for Summer Season * No Security Deposit with Aggie I.D. * Reserve Now Limited Units Available (Advance Payment Required) Call 779-SAFE for details (779-7233) Security & Storage 2306 S. College Bryan AM/PM Clinics 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 HEY AGS! COME BY OUR BOOTH WEDNESDAY. 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