V Page 14AThe Battalion/Tuesday, April 5, 1988 r-IRSTClTY. Student loans Guaranteed Student Loan Program • 17 years experience •No banking relationship re quired •Fast loan processing •Apply early for Fall of '88 •Loans processed through Texas Guarantee Student Loan Corp. Contact your local student loan representative Dorinda Arden 776-5402 First City National Bank/3000 Briarcrest Dr., Bryan Member FDIC © 1988 FCBOT ClNEPLEX ODEON AND PUTT THEATRES POST OAK THREE 1500 HARVEY RD. 693-2796 (pq-iq 7:10 0:10 * CPQ) 7:05 0:05 1BL 7:00 0:00 I CINEMA THREE 315 COL 1 FGE AVE. 693-2796 King’s followers vow to continue civil rights fight (PQ-H) 7:00 0:15 JPOL 7:5 J5L 7:10 0:10 ) Can’t deduct your IRA this year? There are Alternatives for Tax Deferred Growth and Tax Free Income. For your IRA alternative Call 260-9629 Allan Dunlap Denise Fries Royce Overstreet George Lambert Virginia Andrews Julie Boldt 111 East University Suite 210, C.S. MEMPHIS, Tenn. (AP) — Fol lowers of Martin Luther King Jr. marched Monday to the motel where he was assassinated 20 years ago and promised to keep fighting to reach his “promised land” by call ing attention to the plight of the poor. “Until we wipe out poverty in the ghetto, nowhere can be safe. No where can be secure, for one hungry person speaks in misery to every body,” said Joseph Lowery, presi dent of the Southern Christian Leadership Conference, a civil rights organization founded by King. “There ain’t going to be no peace in the suburbs until there is justice in the ghetto,” Lowery told about 3,000 people who marched a mile and a half through downtown Memphis to The Lorraine Motel. campaign to draw attention to pov erty. Fifty members of Lowery’s orga nization were scheduled to leave from the motel Monday on a combi nation march and motorcade through Mississippi, Alabama and Georgia, but the “poor people’s pil grimage” was delayed a day because two mules did not arrive on time. King was assassinated on April 4, 1968, while in Memphis to support a strike by city sanitation workers. He also was conducting a nationwide The mules are a symbol of pov erty, Lowery said, and a wagon they were to pull is similar to one used for King’s funeral in Atlanta. The Lorraine itself has become something of a symbol of poverty. At one time, the motel had about 60 rooms, but the decaying two-story building had only 12 rooms in use when the state closed it in January to make way for a museum. Opponents of the museum project, say the money should be spent turning The Lorraine into housing for the home less. HEY AGS! COME BY OUR BOOTH WEDNESDAY, APRIL 6TH 10:00 AM - *1:00 PM IN THE EXHIBIT HALL OF RUDDER THEATER BE SURE TO REGISTER TO WIN A PANASONIC FM STEREO HEADPHONE RADIO BALCONES APARTMENTS 1000 Balcones Drive, Suite A-l, College Station, Texas 77840, (409) 693-2777 Swaggart speaks amid controversy over punishment BATON ROUGE (AP) — Na tional leaders of the Assemblies of God took no action Monday regard ing Jimmy Swaggart, following the evangelist’s most emotional church speech since stepping down from the pulpit Feb. 21, a denomination spokesman said. Swaggart received a favorable re sponse Sunday night from the crowd at his Family Worship Center, but officials of the Assemblies of God said his appearances during Easter services would have violated the terms of a one-year ban on preach ing it ordered last week. Taking the microphone briefly during Sunday night’s service, Swag gart paced like a cat and shouted into the microphone. said. “It works! It works!,” he shaking a Bible. “If there is a re porter here, spread the word every where. It works!” The Rev. Everett Stenhouse, assis tant general superintendent for the Assemblies of God, said Swaggart’s appearance would have violated the one-year ban. But because Swaggart has not signed any agreement, he has not submitted to the church’s rehabilita tion program. The church’s General Presbytery last Tuesday banned Swaggart from the pulpit for at least a year for “moral failure.” A self-described prostitute has said Swaggart paid her to pose nude for him. World briefs Troops look for missing coupleade MAN1L.A, Philippines (AP) Troops raided the seaside vaca tion house of opposition Sen. Juan Ponce Enrile on Sunday but failed to find the leader of an Au gust coup attempt who fled his prison ship, military officials said. A Manila paper, meanwhile, reported that nine other officers believed to be involved in past coup attempts had fled a deten tion center on Saturday. The re port could not be confirmed. The raid on Emile’s house in Batangas province, southwest of Manila, was part of as nationwide search for former Lt. Col. Grego rio “Gringo” Honasan, leader of th#* Aug. 98 coup attempt that nearly toppled the Aquino; ernment, military officialssa^" Honasan, 39, escaped fuj prison ship before dawn SaiaT with 14 elite navy personnel^ were supposed to be guan him. He had been confinedtl, since his arrest Dec. 9 forty tempted coup that leftatleia] people dead and wounded. Vc President Corazon Aijiii who had refused to grantj nesty to Honasan, warned * diers and civilians nottoj charismatic former colonel i is popular among manvinj 160,000-member armedforctl Troops kill Palestinian during prote ARRUB, Occupied West Bank (AP) — Israeli soldiers shot a Pal estinian dead and wounded eight on Monday, a day of strike and protest in the occupied lands against the peace mission by Sec retary of State George P. Shultz. A Palestinian died in the Gaza Strip of wounds suffered last week. At least 138 Arabs have been killed since violence began Dec. 8 in the West Bank and Gaza, according to L.N. figures. An Is raeli soldier also has died. Talks between Shultz and Is raeli leaders focused on the L.S. proposal for Palestinian self-rule rather than how to arrange an in ter national conference. Prime Minister YitzhakSI opposes such a forum, buifj eign Minister ShimonPeresij “The international confer® just a door that will be ( Peres, the prime ministersti cal rival and partner in then them government, supportiH ference. He told reporters in “The question is what art] going to discuss after it (ihtd ference) is opened. Mayhti more we go into details, thtj threatening it will beforSh; Shamir says Israel wouU| outnumbered at suchatot ence and risk having imposed upon it. Leg ICongi Jtempt | causer [sect tl Sen Ition) ; |Ennis [autho I portal | cost t< | an art In U.S. households contain fewer peopf WASHINGTON (AP) — The United States has more than 90 million households for the first time, but each contains fewer people than ever, the Census Bu reau reported Monday. The 90,031,000 households in the United States averaged 2.64 members each asoflastjuly 1. “The reason is, in effect, changes in the age structure,” said Campbell Gibson, a popula tion specialist for the bureau. Most Americans born in the post-World War II Baby Boom are now in their 20s and 30s, ages during which they are most likely to set up households on their own, he said. The fact that many are doing so boosted the number of house holds from 80.4 million in 1980 to 88.8 million in 1986 and die 90 million mark last sum At the same time, the an number of people perhousel declined from 2.75 in li 2.65 in 1986 and then to By comparison, the ISlds sus found the average houstls contained 3.14 people holds averaged more t people in 1930 and morei five in 1880. The growing number of smaller households contiral trend, but Gibson pointed that household growth ism pacing population increase fast as in the 1970s. All felectioi ioverr ly a h ^allots The Council Jaces v» 10 cou iiess ac )an C The same age factors that jl < j^ s J increasing the number of hi® i holds also occurred then, said. enougl he tot he get eceive eceivi o Sm HOUSING FAIR ’88 ause nore t aken t Smi cnocki irecec urn t who s< s chai ilans iut thi nittee ,nd ef helps you Fre: Miller iresid lim 6 Avoid the Mad Sevi i Athlet gains Dash : : a&m ector :dged She mpor lations strong “sema ttenti ractic But with information on housing and services for life off campus ittorn ersity Inca/ ral of cedun poteni “To Wednesday, April 6 Rudder Exhibit Hall ions, eleph bothei i kid I’m gc “1 v most he all :al coi if tin hose ■olve i 10 a.m. to 4 p.m. was al those things defem Anc T.Jor could NCA/ Sponsored by the Off Campus Center and Off Campus “Ar excha takes Tuesci looks that d Six