MOVIEGOING VALUE AT ALL LOCATIONS I ClNEPLLX ODtON THEATRE GUIDE ' FILMS • ALL SHOWTIVES SPEOAl PR£ MENTATIONS NOT J^JCL UOED POST OAK THREE l :>OG Harvey Koad NAKED GUN(PG-13) 7:20 9:30 WORKING GIRL (R) 7:00 9:20 THE JANUARY MAN (R) 7:10 9:25 ^CINEMA THREE 1 |3I5 College Ave. 693-279C TWINS (PG) 7:00 9:05 TALK RADIO (R) 9:15 LAND BEFORE TIME (G) 7:15 NIGHT OF THE DEMONS (R) 7:20 9:20 SCHULMAN 250 ADMISSION 1. Any Show Bator* S PM THEATRES •DENOTES DOLBY STEREO Mon^Wed. - Local Student* With Current ID's . Thur.-KOHA ■Over 30 niohr PLAZA 3 226 Southwest Pkwy. 693-2457 SCHULMAN 6 '002 E 29th 775-2463 •RAJNMAN r I TEQUILA SUNHSE pg ‘BEACHES P«M3 S DOLLAR DAYS $ THREE FUGITIVES pg BKj PG-13 A RSH CALLED WANDA » 7:15 DIRTY ROTTEN SCOUNDREL pg-i3 7:05 *23 DIEHARD R 7:00 . *40 WITHOUT A CLUE ™ 7:10 MANOR EAST 3 Manor East Mall 823-8300 "MISSISSIPPI BURNING R ‘ACCIDENTAL T0UBST pg OLIVER & COMPANY g DEEP STAR SIX R 8:43 ■Maa-ftl. . If it makes noise tonight come seej is in the morning! ATLAS TRANSMISSION Tex*# Brya T79-0555 \aggi inema/ International Film Series From the maker of Tampopo ..A E> (Japanese with English Subtitles) Tuesday, January 31 7:30 pm Rudder Theatre $2.50 w/TAMU ID Co-sponsored with MSC Jordan Institute for International Awareness FEBRUARY 1,1989 9:00-3:00 1 ST FLOOR MSC MSC HOSPITALITY AND (N T you CAN LUED M ROUNDING Page 6 The Battalion Tuesday, January 31,1989 Store chain owner arrested at airport for fake death scam Nationwide hunt ends at D-FW; Hanson faces fraud charges FORT WORTH (AP) — A former clothing store chain owner who was the subject of a nationwide hunt for allegedly faking his own death in a $1.5 million insurance scam was ar rested Monday at Dallas-Fort Worth International Airport. , Melvin Hanson, a co-founder of Just Sweats, an athletic clothing stores based in Columbus, Ohio, was apprehended by U.S. Customs Serv ice officials at for allegedly carrying a bogus passport, officials said. He was arraigned Monday af ternoon before district magistrate Gene Grant and charged with theft by fraud on an warrant from Ohio. Hanson remained in the Tarrant County Jail and bond was set at $5 million. Columbus police detective James Lanfear said he was told by federal officials that Hanson was carrying a passport with the name Wolfgang Eugene von Snowde, or Snowden, two aliases that Hanson had used. Lanfear also said it is believed that Hanson was returning from Aca pulco, Mexico, where he went to see a plastic surgeon. “I am very, very pleased. At last we can start to get the ball rolling,” Lanfear said. B. Hawkins, 25, have been wanted by police in Columbus and Califor nia since mid-1988, when it was dis covered that Hanson was not dead and Hawkins had disappeared. Theft charges against Hanson and Hawkins were filed Oct. 14 by Farmers New World Life Insurance Co. of Mercer Island, Wash., which paid Hawkins $1 million in death benefits. Hawkins was Hanson’s ben eficiary. Scrambled Eggs Seni< WASH 11 gress, univ questioned giving big | judges who Burger, do All 306 who no Ion ries rise by approves r Q Burger’s $60,000 to! “We nee Rep. Carlo! an effort to tus. “It doest publican, v mittee and studying th Moorhea the issue, ai lishing son raises.” POOOONB 5P££Pe>UMP£... Official: Revise AIDS testing law AUSTIN (AP) — A 1987 law requiring con sent for medical testing should be clarified to bet ter protect confidentiality of people getting AIDS tests, a state lawmaker said Monday. Rep. Billy Clemons told the House Committee on Public Health that rules issued by the Texas Department of Health have required specific consent for AIDS testing, possibly endangering the privacy of people getting the test. Clemons, vice chairman of the committee, has proposed a bill saying the general consent form would cover AIDS testing. The committee agreed to further study of the proposal. “What my bill does is to reverse (the Health Department’s rules) and say that the general con sent form will do for any test the physician or ders,” Clemons, D-Pollok, told the committee during a public hearing. The 1987 Communicable Disease Prevention and Control Act provided for a general medical testing consent form that would include, but not specify, AIDS testing, Clemons said. The general wording was meant in part to pro tect the confidentiality of people being tested for acquired immune deficiency syndrome. Clemons said his proposal would simply reiter ate the wording of the 1987 law. “The reasoning for this is not because the De partment of Health acted out of bounds or any thing,” Clemons said. “I just think (requiring spe cific consent for an AIDS test) does just the opposite of the intention of the law. It hurts the confidentiality rather than helps it.” Earl Matthews, representing the Texas Medi cal Association and the Texas Infectious Diseases Society, testified in favor of the bill, saying that physicians need a blanket testing consent form to protect them from liability. Matthews said doctors need the form to show that consent for testing was requested, in case a patient who has refused an AIDS test later turns up with the disease. Matthews also said the law should be modified so doctors could order tests for incapacitated or unconscious patients w ithout oral or writteno: sent. Others who testified at the hearing opp® Clemons’ bill, saying it would allow “secrei ing, “over-testing” and would be unfair to; tients who later have to pay for tests they did want. Glen Maxey, executive director of theLesh Gay Political Caucus, said patients have a righ i refuse the test. I “(The bill) takes away the ability of having tt sent, with someone discussing it with theirdi tor. We need to tighten it back down,’’ Man said. Annette Lovoi, president of the Texas Ca sumer Association, also opposed the bill. “It is our contention that an individual,you I, have every right to full information onli scope of service that’s being recommended! us, as well as the cost of that service,” Lovoi said “We feel that (the bill) disguises the con* that we are seeking, that any medical patiem be an informed consumer,” she said. FBI, Hispanic agents begin negotiations EL PASO (AP) — Lawyers for the FBI and for the 311 Hispanic agents who successfully sued in a racial dis crimination case met Monday to dis cuss what the FBI will do to clean up its act. Neither side wanted to discuss specifics of the talks, which plain tiffs’ attorney Hugo Rodriguez lik ened to union-management negotia tions. “All of the issues of liability are at stake — how much each individual class member will get, what institu tional changes will be made, whether retaliation will be compensated,” plaintiffs’ co-counsel Tony Silva said. “We’re in preliminary negotia tions. We’re simply laying the groundwork to negotiate.” U.S. District Judge Lucius Bunton ruled after a two-week, non-jury trial last summer that the FBI dis criminated against Hispanic agents in promotions, assignments and dis cipline. The class-action lawsuit was brought by the FBI’s No. 2 man in the El Paso office, Bernardo “Mat” Perez, and 310 of the agency’s ap proximately 400 agents joined in the suit. Bunton ordered the two sides to meet in El Paso and talk all this week if necessary to settle as many differ ences as possible. He has scheduled a damages trial starting Feb. 20 in which he will hear testimony and rule on whichever issues have not settled out of court. Rodriguez and Silva predicted the damages trial could take two weeks more. FBI attorneys declined comment, but the agency filed court docu ments two months ago in which it proposed having each of the 311 plaintiffs fill out a long form to help determine whether they should get back pay and how much. The FBI also proposed changing its system of taking and monitoring in-house discrimination complaints by training counselors better and placing the equal employment op portunity office under the supervi sion of one of the four executive as sistant FBI directors. Bunton ruled the FBI discrimi nated against Hispanic agents by as signing them too often to monitor Spanish-language wiretaps that could be monitored just as easily by Spanish-speaking Anglo agents or by clerks. The FBI proposed hiring at least 30 Spanish-speaking linguists ins and certain goals for promotion ofH panics,” said Rodriguez, who was- FBI agent for more than a deo before he quit to practice law The FBI has not even addrei Bunion’s ruling that the bureau taliated against Perez by laundi an illegal grand-jury investigation him, Rodriguez said. Hiring linguists to monitor taps is a step in the right direct! ilva to monitor wiretaps . py agents bonuses for improving for eign-language fluency. But Rodriguez labeled the propo sals “cosmetic and prophylactic” measures to assuage Bunton and said they didn’t go far enough. “We believe the FBI should have Silva said. But he added that should receive a bonus each tit they use their foreign-langiu skills. Under the FBI’s prop agents would receive bonuses ei time they upgraded their fluency an agent entering the FBI at highest level of fluency would no receive a bonus. Silva said he believes the daraai portion of the case will go to trial EXHIBITION EXTENDED JANUARY 19- MARCH 4, 1989 RUDDER EXHIBIT HALL Gallery Lecture January 31,198S 4p[i Rudder Exhibit Hal THE FIRST TEXAS TRIENNIAL Prof. Joseph M. Hutchinson, College of Architecture Prof. Rodney C. Hi College of Architecture Prof. Richard Davison College of Architecture Reception to fo Docent tours available, 845-! This exhibition was organized by the ContemporaryA«; Museum. Houston, and is supported by a grant Iromff Texas Commission on the Arts, the National Endowtte' tor the Arts, and the Arts Council of Brazos Valley. Texas A & M University Art Exhibits C0SGA: N.0.W.:i FELLOW study at / MSC CEI NUTRITI TAMU SI OFFICE a lecture STUDEN GAY ST( TAMU N KLEIN H RECRE/ singles, ' a.m. - 5 p STUDEI CATHOl center. ON CAN ETA KAI SILVER PRETHE TRIATHI AGGIE < 105 Arch TAMUS T0ASTA ALL NIG ALCOHI for detail COCAIh details. 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