Page 4/The BattalionTuesday, June 7, 1988 Our Newest Shipment of Loose Diamonds was delivered May 30. Shop today for the Lowest prices on quality diamonds in Town! BINDING low cost • fast service kinko's Great copies. Great people. 201 College Main College Station, Tx 846-8721 ROUND Our Price $47,000 Compare at $75,000 .52 ROUND Our Price 795 Compare at 1,500 .44 MARQUISE Our Price 795 Compare at 1,500 13,950 27,000 .52 795 1,500 .41 650 1,300 5,750 11,000 .51 795 1,500 .35 495 900 8,750 17,000 .50 695 1,300 .25 250 500 4,350 8,000 .50 695 1,300 .23 275 500 3,875 7,000 .50 795 1,500 .18 195 400 2,325 2,750 4,600 5,000 .48 .47 695 695 1,400 1,400 .11 110 200 2,995 6,000 .47 695 1,400 OVAL 2,350 3,950 4,600 8,000 .46 .45 650 595 1,200 1,100 1.18 Our Price $2,250 Compare at $4,500 2,195 4,000 .44 595 1,100 1.11 2,195 4,000 2,750 5,000 .44 495 1,000 .79 985 1,800 3,850 7,000 .43 575 1,200 .70 1,395 2^780 2,150 4,000 .39 275 500 .65 1,195 2^390 3,595 7,000 .37 375 600 .63 895 1,600 1,495 3,000 .36 335 600 .58 995 1,800 1,895 4,000 .34 335 600 .57 1,225 M00 3,495 7,000 .33 275 500 .53 1,225 1,400 2,185 4,200 .30 335 600 .51 1,095 2,200 1,895 3,000 .24 210 400 .28 312 600 2,395 4,600 .21 165 300 .10 105 200 1,595 3,000 .22 185 400 1,850 4,000 .21 215 400 HEARTSHAPE 1,650 3,200 .19 165 300 Our Price Compare at 3,195 6,000 .18 155 300 .90 $1,890 $3,600 1,595 3,000 .16 118 200 .75 1,590 3,000 1,750 3,100 .15 111 200 .58 1,375 2,600 1,350 2,600 .14 95 180 .51 1,395 2,600 895 1,700 .12 78 140 1,340 2,600 .10 63 120 EMERALD 1,595 3,000 .09 55 110 Our Price Compare 1,765 3,100 .08 48 90 2.16 $6,795 $13,000 1,025 2,000 .07 45 90 1.37 4,850 8,900 985 1,800 .06 41 80 .75 1,395 2,600 1,075 2,000 .05 35 70 .41 595 1,100 950 1,900 .04 30 60 .38 495 900 1,135 2,200 .03 14.95 30 1,395 2,600 .02 10.95 30 PRINCESS/RADIANT 1,480 2,800 Our Price Compare at 1,495 2,800 MARQUISE 1.02 $2,475 $5,000 1,125 2,200 Our Price Compare at 1.02 1,650 3,200 1,395 2,600 1.56 $4,775 $6,500 .64 1,295 2,400 1,695 3,200 1.10 3,275 5,300 .47 795 1,500 1,395 2,700 1.05 2,675 4,900 .33 395 800 1,395 2,700 1.02 2,850 5,200 .28 385 800 1.095 2,000 1.02 2,275 3,900 .25 325 600 1,050 2,100 1.01 1,275 2,200 1,395 2,700 .89 1,750 3,300 PEAR SHAPE 795 1,400 .89 1,795 3,590 Our Price Compare at 995 1,800 .82 1,575 2,900 1.67 $4,575 $9,000 895 1,800 .79 1,895 3,600 1.21 2,375 4,600 795 1,500 .74 795 1,500 1.13 2,295 4,500 795 1,500 .72 1,650 3,300 1.04 2,495 4,800 795 1,500 .70 1,795 3,300 1.01 2,675 5,200 850 1,600 .61 975 1,800 .93 2,095 4,000 795 1,500 .55 850 1,700 .68 1,095 2,000 695 1,400 .55 850 1,700 .65 895 1,600 695 1,400 .55 895 1,800 .62 1,395 2,700 795 1,500 .51 950 1,900 .59 795 1,500 895 1,700 .50 895 1,800 .60 1,150 2,200 795 1,500 .50 825 1,600 .58 995 1,900 595 1,000 .49 795 1,500 .52 665 1,200 695 1,400 .47 795 1,300 .45 325 600 795 1,500 .10 95 200 30-day Money Back Guarantee-Ask for Details 404 University Dr. East College Station 846-8905 Texas A&M University System Employees Your Body Is A Wonderful Thing, Cover It With Texas Health Plans. Texas Health Plans is a Health Maintenance Organization dedicated to providing Texans with quality, affordable health care. New Benefits Primary Care Physician Office Visits $5 copayment (includes the following services and more) Well Child Care no charge Immunization no charge Maternity (pre- and post-natal care) $5 copayment for initial office visit Authorized Referral Specialist visits and care $5 copayment X-rays and lab tests no charge Medically necessary hospitalization no charge Lenses and frames or contacts $80.00 per set Prescription drugs $4.0 0/Austin $4.50/Bryan-College Station and Waco RATES Waco, Temple Bryan-College Station Austin Employee ...$84.62 $82.87 Employee and one dependent ...$167.50 $174.02 Employee and family ...$255.24 $256.88 Enrollment ends July 15, 1988. For more information, call Texas Health Plans today at: (800) 234-7912 Ttecas Health Plans, Inc What’s Up f ar|: Tuesday MOO DUK KWAN TAE KWON DO: Practice and information about men bership: Mondays 7-8:30 p.m., Fridays 5:30-7 p.m., Saturdays 10:30a.m,-12ii j 267 Reed Bldg. Call Murray Moore at 696-6419 or 845-2251 for information. Wednesday Great Commission Students: Kick off rally, “The Spice of Life, in 102 Zachry at 7:30 p.m. Items for What’s Up should be submitted to The Battalion, 216 Reed McDomli no later than three business days before the desired run date. We only publist the name and phone number of the contact if you ask us to do so. What's Up's a Battalion service that lists non-profit events and activities. Submissionsarew on a first-come, first-served basis. There is no guarantee an entry will run. lip. have questions, call the newsroom at 845-3315. GOOD E CITY, ‘ TENNI WRPD Lyric Arts Festival brings 4 concerts to A&M this month B By Staci Finch Staff Writer !o” and “Quartet Canada: Trj tional and Contemporary Exp! lions." The music scene in College Sta tion will move up a step on the cultu ral ladder this month when the Col lege of Liberal Arts sponsors a Lyric Art Festival. Working with the School of Music at the University of Houston and Houston’s Museum of Fine Arts, the College presented the first of four chamber concerts last night. F'uture concerts will be presented on June 13, 20, and 27. Each of the four concerts f eatures different composers, and the variety of musical themes are reflected in the titles. The June 13 performance, “Twentieth-Century American Pi oneers,” includes works by George Gershwin and composer Lou Harri son, who will be on hand to present some of his works and give some his tory of the American pioneers. Later concerts are tilled “International Cross-Currents: Homage to the Cel- Concert themes are coord with exhibits in the Houston! seum, said Paul Parrish, dean of the College of LiberalArJ Parrish said the concert grew out of several discussions*: the museum and the UH Schocj Music. “We are working to further: velop our music program here said. “We have been dis bringing this series to College i tion for a long time, and itisf an ongoing relationship with: University of Houston’s School Music." Concerts will begin at 7:30p.n|'; Rudder Forum, and will be folk by receptions. Tickets are in the MSC Box Office. Texas xew $5.3 built jnng me ^ity comr The f legem X (las, shoe summer, dee char and Con: “It’s J jtranspor (“The Be about sb shortcon air travel “A m compani coming 1 vas a pre Peel s; aand Ea Feet to 3( “It’s a would s< aorts,” F ‘Tt wi [jetways to boarc ^ates,” h TheE Officials struggle to help deaf boy find home, family EL PASO (AP) — A hearing-im paired boy may have added another piece to the puzzle of his identity Monday by repeatedly pointing to a puzzle piece corresponding to the state of Oklahoma, officials said. Law authorities also were check ing into whether the boy, who is be lieved to be from the United States and was found wandering in a Mexi can border town last year, is from Il linois. The boy — nicknamed Sabat by child protection workers caring for him in J uarez, Mexico — has a fond ness for American food and cartoon characters and is familiar with U.S. currency. The hoy has scars on his left knee, abdomen and back that seem to be two or three years old, and he has re peatedly sketched an airplane crash in attempts to communicate. Au thorities believe the sketches may mean the boy was the only member of his family to survive a plane crash. Tunr ent ve illed in oma t _1934. H Tulsa h Kincaid said he has gotten not ports about missing children fa J in £ , Oklahoma, but that the officehas 1 ' unne ceived dozens of telephone a from across the nation fr eager to help solve the mysten Sahat’s origins. Ayala said the hoy has tried whisper to Juanita McCray, a to: j “‘ ’' n ' munity liaison with the Depart:® p ai kj n „ of Human Services, but that if ' ) sounds he makes are unintelli| McCray said Sahat’s actions coil dicate he lost his hearing inanatt dent. “I don’t think a child that0 could speak would try to whispfl she said Sunday. Pictures Sabat has drawn seen indicate he was brought up» MIAI old Tex lent be were go arrest h Russe Texas, c He is called Sabat because he was found on a Saturday, or “sabado” in Spanish. He bears some resemblance to a 4-year-old who disappeared from Decatur, Ill., in October 1985, officials said. The Center for Missing and Ex ploited Children in Washington, D.C., provided a description of the missing boy, named T.J. Davison, and was forwarding copies of Davi son’s fingerprints and footprints, Terry Kincaid, spokesman for the El Paso FBI office, said. mountainous area with knee-fe snow. Authorities believed the chill might have matched the descrip® of one kidnapped a couple of JOB ago in Alaska, but that boy was® covered over the weekend, A® said. Both Juarez and El Paso child*! fare employees are working toge® to help solve the case, officials said Ham ember onditic charge ( erty Coi Mian praised in Mian struggle fired s< The cooperation is the resultof- agreement the two agencies sigP last February in which they plecf to help each other is cases likei bat’s. GA lion’s impoi the c Sgt. John Mickler of the Decatur police department said Monday he doubts Sabat is Davison, but hasn’t given up hope. Pat Ayala, spokesman for the state Department of Human Services, said that newspapers and television stations from numerous cities around the state and nation have taken interest in Sabat. Texaco Inc. sells subsidiaif to Germans A visit by an NBC television crew over the weekend yielded a possible clue as to where the child is from. Reporters and child protection workers disassembled a wooden puz zle of the United States and laid out the 50 pieces corresponding to the states. “He kept pointing to Oklahoma,” Ayala said Monday. “He had drawn a picture of a house — a two-story house. He kept pointing to the house and we had the states lined up and he kept pointing to that partic ular one (Oklahoma).” Even when a social worker cov ered the puzzle piece corresponding to Oklahoma, the boy insisted on looking for the missing state, she said. NEW YORK (AP) — Texaco announced Monday that it I® agreed to sell its West German s» ; i sidiary to Rheinish-WestfaeM Elektrizitaetswerk AG, the count 1 ' largest utilit y company, for a litf more than $ 1.2 billion. At its headquarters in Essen, 1 German firm, also known as R" : said it would pay $1.23 billion Texaco’s 99.12 percent interest Deutsche Texaco AG, complet the first major part of a $5 billioi® structuring plan by the White Pla' ! N.Y., based oil giant. The deal, signed in Luxemboei was subject to approval by the"; German Federal Cartel Office, I both sides said they expected ill encounter no difficulties. Negotiations leading to the W had been going on for months.] Texaco immersed itself in plans restructure following its April ei® gence from Chapter 11 Banknf Court protection.