Cr n I ( ( "X BROWN BAG SPECIAL 2 Regular Burgers 2 Orders of Fries 2 Medium Cokes* plus TAX * OR OTHER SOFT DRINK. Bring a friend and share the FUN! College Station 104 University 696-6427 Bryan 914 S. Texas Ave. 779-1085 Page 4/The BattalionAVednesday 21,1988 The Power Hitter. Hyundai’s Super-286C gives you pro-quality performance at an affordable price. ♦ 80286 Microprocessor, 8 or 10 mHz + 1.2mb Floppy Drive ^640K RAM (Expandable to IBM) t Serial, Parallel, Clock Calendar t EGA Graphics Card ^101 Key Keyboard t MS DOS, GW Basic t 18 Month Warranty $1196 w/Monochrome Monitor $1496 w/EGA Monitor COMPUTER ACCESS has served the Brazos Valley for over four years. We offer sales and full technical support for IBM compatibles. Whether you are looking for hardware, software, and upgrade or repair, you can be sure of friendly & knowledgeable service, and about all: MORE BYTES, LESS BUCKS COA1PUTER 403 B. University Dr. W. (409) 268-0033 819 S. Texas Ave. (409) 268-0730 D MSC Political Forum TERRORISM AND THE PERSIAN GULF Former Iranian hostage and military intelligence expert COLONEL CHARLES SCOTT will be speaking. Wednesday, September 21 Rudder Theater 8:00 pm Free admission MSC Jordan Institute for This program is brought to you by MSC Political Forum in cooperation with MSC Jordan Institute. ^International Awareness Commission brings job, education opportunities to disabled B-CS citizenH< By Juliette Rizzo Staff Writer The Texas Rehabilitation Com mission on campus is working to make more education and employ ment opportunities available ro stu dents and citizens of Bryan-College Station who have a physical or men tal disability that may prevent them from acquiring a job without assis tance. Sue McBeth, vocational rehabilita tion counselor for the A.P. Beutel Health Center, said the Commission identifies those students needing physical or financial assistance be cause of a disability. Most large universities have reha bilitation commissions on campus, she said, but the commissions are not part of the universities. “We’re a state agency,” McBeth said, “and my job as counselor is to identify anyone here or in the com munity who may need any of the va riety of services we provide. We’re not really territorial. We serve any one we can, including Texas A&M and Blinn students, A&M staff, staf f family members and people in the community.” The Commission’s main purpose is to identify people needing help and fitting them into a program de pending on their individual needs. “Many different health problems can cause a person to need our serv ices,” McBeth said. “Even substance abuse of drugs and alcohol will qual ify for consideration in our pro gram.” People with physical, emotional and mental problems qualify for as sistance from the Commission. Physical problems include those that make it hard for people to do breathe, eat, sit, stand or sleep.Emo tional problems include those that make it hard to concentrate, like family conflicts. “A chronic stutterer or a person who has severe asthma probably doesn’t realize anyone can help them, but they can qualify for our services,too,” McBeth said. To qualify for the program, it must he clear that the problt keep the student from being, work. “For people who have problems,” Mc Beth said, “gf job can be hard. That’s wli come in. We can providethe with physical and financialli demic counseling and tutors Signs built to mar A&M boundaries By Fiona Soltes include m ait itenance of then Staff Writer ers, he sai< d. Construction has bej. > UI a on “It wou Id be nice to havef markers defining bound ari ies of money foi r r naintenance, but the Texas A&M campus. type of fu nc ling is based on. The brick and steel pa ne Is be- age, not c >n what goes on it ing built at the corners of Ui riiver- said. sity Avenue and Texas A> /enue Bill Sen >u. project manage! and Jersey Street and Te> tas ; Ave- facilities c or ist ruction, saidt nue are part of the secon d phase than $231 ),(] KH) lias been alii of a project that includ ed con- for the coi till act. struction of the west-end m larker on the corner of Univers ity Ave- “The ; till lount lias inert nue and FM 2818. several tii ne s above the on; Gene Ray, director of | gr< iunds contract,” h e said. “We dis maintenance, said the in; trkers ered son ne unknown un are a necessary addition i t o the ground nditions, indui University. pipelines th at needed to be “It was time to line ati e the paired, wl lie li requiredaddiu property and let peopl e know funds,” Sc on t said. that these are the bound tar ies of Texas A&M,” Ray said. The pr ect is sdieduld The funding for the P 1 roject, completioi n 1 >y Feb. If 1989. which comes from pei in anent days after ■ il be original none universitv fund bonds r lo< »s not begin cons itn notion was given WASI hat ter ional di nd sh tronger Bonn i ii he g"> 11 or the ■nces. Bruce L'nii 'ork an hut the Strong: “The i ,calh. v com s not d. Phvlf tnd the I tfonreles Hied rot re fie vhat was “1 hi,- were a I lot able i oroblem: I jhould I ptrk. a panel me i six-p.ii Tonkawa Indians enraged by historians denial of trih Tonk Valley, named for the Tonkawa Indian tribe, is In Jul y 1855, the To nl tawas set up ft v e differeuli a small community that was once the home of Indians lages on the Brazos Rc ■rvation in whi ;it is now® whose eating habits and very existence are still d ebated. Valley, li listorians said. Some say the Tonkawas practiced ritualistic t :anniba- An at chivist at the I ‘Ol i t Belknap An limes. liaM- lism. Some historians believe the tribe is now extinct. Led be tt < ir, said canniba lis m cases wpre 1 ew undinw And that belief has Tonkawa tribal members e nraged. and onf y the results ol tarvation that the tribe’® The Tonkawas were in Young County south west of from he ing forced by th e Army to wa Ik IromYsf Graham, Texas, for four years from 1855-59, hi storians County to a reservatic >n near present- day Anadasi say. Stories of cannibalism are known to Toni t Valley Okla. residents, a part of the past Tonkawas do not de ny. • Accor ding to settle! rs’ descriptions of a ToJ But, in Tonkawa, Okla., Don Patterson, vie e presi- camp, tl be men sat an ou ind in fine jev i cln wliii t dent of the Tonkawa Indian Agency and a T dnkawa women, who wore bod; v t ailoos, went aboutt/lHTtl Indian, is disgusted that the tribal enrollment c if 280 is topless? ' The Tonkawas d etorated theii J.iies bvjT: not recognized by historians. He said he has tw obooks ing or tai ttooing black lit ; f rom their for eheads to: f: published by Texas authors that state the tribe is “That is like me sitting in my own little shell a gone. nostrils. They did not 1 iki e farming and nere no-f nd say- hunters who often star d dining wintt ?r on re | Patterson says that Tonkawas did consume human flesh as a part of a ritual. Tonkawas believed in “assocna tive magic” — that tribesmen could gain a dead person’s powers by consuming his flesh. For the same reason, Indians wore eagle feathers to gain the keen senses of an eagle, Patterson said. “Cannibalism among native people was common all across the world. The trouble today is people conjure up images of Robinson Crusoe and Tarzan,” Patterson said. Tonkawa warriors served as scouts for the Army, Tonkawas once proclaimed that “Comanche meat is better than bear meat,” according to the book “Indian Tribes of Texas.” The book also claims the Tonkawas have vanished. “Tonkawas do exist as a tribal entity. An Indian is a cultural definition not a blood definition,” Patterson said. T he most drastic decline of the tribe began. 1859, when the tribe of 258 was forced to walk: ] dian T erritory. Shawnee, Caddoes and Delaware! ans, along with other tribes, massacred most oftM maining Tonkawas in 1802, the historian said.Afol 1862 massacre, survivors returned to Texas and:] around Fort Grif fin until 1885, Ledbetter said. Patterson said the mixture of rival Indians in bl Territory had the same ef fect as if a cat wereii'l into a cage at a dog kennel. He said his people'j enemies of the tribes sent there and the massacrj invevitable. A Tonk Valley historical marker near Texarl partly the work of Thomas M. Choate, who war] west of the Brazos Reservation site. He made the: of the marker. FREE PIZZA and FOR 2 HOURS ON THURSDAY Sept. 22 7-9pm $2. 25 PITCHERS 268-DAVE 211 University Dr. W. By Deluxe Burger Bar 1 8 CALL BATTALION CLASSIFIED 845-2611