Page 4AThe Battalion/Thursday, June 9, 1988 Floriculture Ornamental Horticulture FOH PLANT SALE SATURDAY JUNE 11,1988 10:00a.m-2:00p.m. I COMMON 1 | QUAD, ‘l 3T ^p L , .NT 3Ai.Cj6- 3r. Kwik Kar Care Center Spring Special 693-2788 1411 A & B Harvey Road (across from Post Oak Mali) Please present coupon 693-3742 valid thru 6-21 Oil-Lube-Filter 14pt. service $16.95 (reg. $21.95) 2 Wheel Brakes lifetime warranty, replace pads or shoes resurface drums or rotors, pack wheel bearings Wheel Balance Computerized All four wheels $19.95 (reg. $23.80 YOU DON’T KNOW WHERE TO EAT OUT? A/C Service Includes evacuation & recharge freon $14.95 (reg. $19.95) $48.88 (reg. $75.95) Check the Battalion ads! Wheel Alignment Computerized 2 wheels 14.95 (reg. $19.95) 4 Wheel Brakes lifetime warranty, replace pads or shoes resurface drums or rotors, rebuild rear wheel cylinder, pack wheel bearings Transmission Service New gasket, fluid, filter & road test $27.95 (reg. $34.95) $88.88 (reg. $155.95) Tune-Up 4-6-8 cylinder 6 mos./6000 miles warranty Parts & Labor $43.95 (reg. $47.95) 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 • $4.00/Austin $4.50/Bryan-CoJlege Station and Waco RATES Waco, Temple Bryan-College Station Emp loyee $84.62 Employee and one dependent $167.50 Employee and family $255.24 Austin $82.87 $174.02 $256.88 Enrollment ends July 15, 1988. For more information, call Texas Health Plans today at: (800) 234-7912 Tfexas Health Plans, Inc What’s Up Thursday TAMU MOO DUK KWAN DO:Pratice and information about membership:Mm .iy;r sr.it belt use. 1 B. Sc ndd, Teague, in his 1 l-oaite fcBpera/d. th said the seat belt law isnot'ibj Dallas, in ] nocuous piece of legislation"iiJBi om T im, seem. Bpie deal. “It is a law that can easilybt: by law enforcement personstoo much misery to many driven passengers of motor vehideso: state,” he said, calling the “clearly antiethical to the legie aims of a f ree society. ■tat the nt Hs well as ; Haying eat no $83 mill I Singleto H'uesday i Host, whic Statement fe-transact ini Hebt and f I The sal Hrepreneu Hancially i J’ost; the n Wood! ■unbearn ■wns thro a holding But, without writing a majority opinion, the appeals court denied Raymond Richards’ request to re view his conviction for failure to wear a seat belt while driving in Southside Place, a Harris County municipality. He was fined $40, he said. “I’m almost 70,” Richards said Wednesday in an interview. “1 have been driving for well over 50 years, and I have never found a “Given what the court does its . . I say to George Orwell who** ‘1984,’ which provides a chillinji of a totalitarian society in whidi vidualism and privacy are syrti cally eliminated: Orwell, be pa:: The executive, legislative and | cial branches of our governmerj working just as fast and hardiil can to make our society like the News Gro depicted in your book. [ eludes G; “Just give us a little moretu»H| He also predicted that Te§ j might someday build a CaH grounds monument to Ridiatc ' his ef forts as “a true advocattc civil right to be left alone anc? constitutional right of privacy’ In Houston, Richards said lit:| uses his seat l>elt. iptH GR cp v ® - "fflow rami] “I’m a lawyer,” he said, the rules. I buckle up nowbeo^F w ^ am11 the law requires it. It’s siUyatfflf: es or 111 part of the time;" he said. 1 ^ P, e: * Hfhcials W Senate committe OKs $123 million for Texas project gway be “pi i; A Rail apown as j ■Will hold a nature gre U.S. F< Gay Ippol el cor WASHINGTON (AP) — A Sen ate committee voted Wednesday in favor of spending $123 million for 13 water development projects in Texas, including $22.8 million for construction of the long-awaited Cooper Lake in the northeast corner of the state. “These projects are essential to my state’s economic vitality,” said Sen. Lloyd Bentsen, D-Texas, who earlier had testified in favor of the projects. The Senate Appropriations sub committee on energy and water de velopment approved the funding Weanesday, to be used during the fiscal year that begins Oct. 1. The House energy anci water de velopment appropriations bill in cludes the same amounts for each of the 13 projects, making it likely that final legislation will include the full amount. • $7.5 million for a floodct’: project on Lake Wichita and Hol| Creek in Wichita and Archert(|| ties. • $5.8 million for a navijp project at the mouth of the Colon River in Matagorda County. • $4.5 million for construct:, Joe Pool Lake in Dallas, Ellis: Tarrant counties on Mouit Creek. • $4.4 million for a flood coif project in El Paso County. • $4.4 million for a floodco: project on Taylors Bayou in B: mont-Port Arthur, Jeffr County. Ipnnel cor Forest Ro: ett Natior i itoring the 1 “We an all,” Ippol ■ill move the site. I “Right i going on’ possible m II The gr< problems |fbrest are said, and f site will bt annual Ga || The Fo across the road, sayi to proteci owns prop The Cooper Lake project, in Delta and Hopkins counties on the South Sulphur River, has been under con struction since 1958, and was in liti gation for more than 13 years — from May 1971 through July 1984, Bentsen’s office said. The federal cost of the project is $133 million, while other costs amount to $227,000, officials in Bentsen’s office said. Explosion, at refinery pla injures five tO' AUST xmnty v her husb; The project is 28 percent com plete, and through September, $49 million in federal funds will have been allocated toward the lake’s con struction. The lake will cover about 32,153 acres and will serve as a reservoir for drinking water, for flood control and recreation, officials in Bentsen’s office said. It is scheduled to be com pleted in September 1992. The committee also approved funding for the following: • $25 million for a flood control project on the San Antonio Channel in San Antonio, Bexar County. • $20 million for construction of Ray Roberts Lake in Cooke, Denton and Grayson counties, between Sanger and Aubrey. • $11.3 million for a navigation project at Freeport Harbor in Brazo ria County. • $8 million for a flood control project on Boggy Creek in Austin. PORT ARTHUR (AP)-At plosion and fire that injured fivfl ployees at a Chevron refinery Wednesday produced flames a' 150 feet high and thick black sff visible for miles. A pump station at the reft west of Port Arthur caught about 9:40 a.m. and spread tot small storage tanks nearby, Che' spokesman Art Spencer said fire was still burning Wednesda ternoon, he said. Fire departments from withif refinery, as well as a mutualaid> ciation composed of units from 1 rounding refineries and the Pot 1 thur Fire Department, also' battling the blaze, he said. “The fire is emitting an awfc of black smoke into the air b does not have any environ^ impact,” Spencer said. Thecau 51 the blaze was not known, he said Spencer said most of the bfc [ curred away from the main ! ufacturing area and was not 2' ing all operations at the plant. “There is concern for thf spreading, but we do not feel' 1 spread to the manufacturing^ because it is divided by T 2 ' Bayou and Texas Highway said. nzarre si jrial Wed of Crimir Pameh had beer jnanslaug lyears in shooting obstetrici I The C in a 7-2 c had imp inony fr called as Was sent possible i Tarrai Attorney died the Was out c for coi W’hether Prosecut cases rev f Accon Fielders disciplim year mar majority showed sented” t I “Thes dually cn ould cl on, a r sm,” Mi