KODALUX Poster Prints Get the Big Picture and Save! 20”x 30” only $15.95* 12”x 18” only $12.95* 'Based on suggested list price. Special prices good: March 20 - April 12, 1989 Big 20”x 30” & 12”x 18” color posters made from your favorite 35mm color neg atives, slides and prints KODALUX Poster Prints. There just isn’t a better way to show off your photographic “works of art”! Get the big picture now and save on KODALUX Poster Prints! i VMI 1 % I 14 l< CENTFI INC. 846-5418 401 University Dr. IS " Tiiiwp TSO for contact lenses. Fifty years of experience is reflected in every pair we fit. After just one visit, it’s easy to see why a comfortable fit is synonymous with contact lenses from Texas State Optical. It starts with a wide selection.TSO offers one of the widest choices of hard and soft lenses available, so you not only get your prescription filled to the doctor’s exact specifications, you also get the kind of fit and tomfort 50 years of experience can offer. 1^3^ okiot a dtK«H a, no .* .rr.i.ad a, .it . t 8008 Post Oak Mall 764-0010 RETURN FROM THE GRAVE... depecheynnn People Are People Compact Disc and Tape Sale 1,000’s of “Monster’* yesteryear hits by the artists whose timeless magic will NEVER die! I I AC/DC - Back In Black □ LED ZEPPELIN - Led Zeppelin I I EAGLES - Greatest Hits I I JAMES TAYLOR - Greatest Hits □ WHITESNAKE - Slide It In □ LED ZEPPELIN - Led Zeppelin II □ FOREIGNER - Records fl EAGLES - Hotel California I I AC/DC - Who Made Who I I U2 - Under A Blood Red Sky I IINXS - Listen Like Thieves □ LED ZEPPELIN - Led Zeppelin □ LED ZEPPELIN - Houses Of The Holy I I PHIL COLLINS - Face Value I I PHIL COLLINS - No Jacket Required □ BAD COMPANY -10 From 6 □ AC/DC - Highway To Hell □ SOUNDTRACK - Stand By Me □ WHITESNAKE - Saints & Sinners □ FLEETWOOD MAC - Rumours □ LED ZEPPELIN - Led zeppelin III □ CARLY SIMON - The Best Of □ YES - 90125 □ THE CARS - The Cars □ PHIL COLLINS - Hello, I Must Be Going I I SEX PISTOLS - Never Mind The Bullocks □ VAN HALEN - Van Halen II □ GENESIS - Genesis □ VAN HALEN - Diver Down □ LED ZEPPELIN - In Through The Out Door ^ INXS ' Shabooh Shoobah I I RATT - Invasion Of Privacy □ INXS - The Swing □ STEVIE NICKS - Bella Donna 1 1 AC/DC - High Voltage □ VAN MORRISON - Moondance □ BAD COMPANY - Bad Company I I AC/DC - Dirty Deeds [~1 JIM CROCE - Photographs & Memories □ CHICAGO - 77 Page 6 The Battalion Monday, March 27,1989 What’s Up Monday MINORITY ASSOCIATION OF PRE-HEALTH AGGIES: will meet at 7 p.m. in 510 Rudder. HONORS STUDENT COUNCIL: will have important information about honors preregistration at 7:30 p.m. in 410 Rudder. MINORITY FRESHMEN ORIENTATION: Applications for orientation student as sistants are available in the Multicultural Services Center in Bizzell through April 10. PARENT’S WEEKEND COMMITTEE: will distribute schedules and information cards to mail to parents from 10 a.m. - 2 p.m. in the MSC Student Programs Of fice and the Student Government Office. ALCOHOLICS ANONYMOUS: will meet at noon. Call the C.D.P.E. at 845-0280 for more information. HILLEL JEWISH STUDENT CENTER: will have lunch with the Rabbi at 12:30 p.m. in the MSC. Tuesday MSC WILEY LECTURE SERIES: Clement Henry will discuss U.S. policy in the Middle East at 7 p.m. in 701 Rudder. THE PLACEMENT CENTER: Leopold, Price and Rolle will present current cor porate fashions at 5 p.m. in 225 MSC. RUSSIAN CLUB: will meet at 6:30 p.m. at the Flying Tomato. HONORS STUDENT COUNCIL: will have pre-registration from 6 a m. -6 p.m.in the Honors office. HART HALL: will have a bike auction from noon to 3 p.m. at Rudder Fountain. PI SIGMA EPSILON: will have registration for the 1989 Scavenger Hunt from9 a.m. - 4 p.m. in the MSC. MARANATHA CAMPUS MINISTRIES: will present a Rock Yf Roll Expose at 7:30 p.m. at the College Station Community Center. ON CAMPUS CATHOLICS: will discuss what it means to be of a different faith at 9 p.m. at All Faiths Chapel. LE CERCLE LE FRANCAIS: will meet at 8:30 p.m. in 125 Academic. STUDENT ORGANIZATION FUNDING WORKSHOP: will be at 4 p m. in 510 Rudder for eligible student organizations. COCAINE ANONYMOUS: will meet at 8:30 p.m. Call the C.D.P.E. at 845-0280 for more information. ALCOHOLICS ANONYMOUS: will meet at noon. Call the C.D.P.E at 845-0280 for more information. Hems for What's Up should be submitted to The Battalion, 216 Reed McDonald, no later than three business days before the desired run date. We only publish the name and phone number of the contact if you ask us to do so. What's Up is a Battalion service that lists non-profit events and activities. Submissions are run on a first-come, first-served basis. There is no guarantee an entry will run. IIyou have questions, call the newsroom at 845-3315. Alaskan oil spill prompts fishermen to seek lost income VALDEZ, Alaska (AP) — Fisher men fearing lost income from the nation’s biggest oil spill sought com pensation Sunday as Alaska’s gover nor prepared to declare once-pris- tine Prince William Sound a disaster area. “We’re not ready to absorb any loss,” said Riki Ott, spokesman for United Fishermen of Alaska. “We expect full compensation.” Exxon Shipping Co. scheduled a meeting Sunday between fishermen and a company claims officer. Meanwhile, the toll on the sound’s abundant wildlife began to mount as efforts continued to clean up the crude oil. The Coast Guard said the slick and patches of oil separated from it were spread over 50 square miles. Department of Interior spokes man Pamela Bergmann said a wild life specialist sailed in the sound Sat urday and observed 75 ducks and two otters coated with oil. They could not be captured for cleaning, she said. Gov. Steve Cowper planned to de clare the area a disaster, and pass on a disaster declaration request to President Bush, said Terence O’Mal ley, Cowper’s deputy press secretary. The 987-foot tanker Exxon Val dez, carrying 1.2 million barrels of North Slope crude oil loaded at Val dez, ran onto a reef 25 nviles from the port early Friday after swinging out of a traffic lane to avoid ice. Val dez is at the southern end of the 800- mile Alaska oil pipeline. Estimates put the spill at 240,000 barrels of oil, or about 10.1 million gallons, making it the biggest U.S. spill on record. The only larger oil- related accident in U.S. waters was the spilling and burning of up to 10.7 million gallons of oil when two ships collided in Galveston Bay in 1979. More than four miles of floating boom had been placed in an effort to contain the oil, the Coast Guard said Sunday. An additional 3,000 feet was to be deployed at Galena Bay at the request of fishermen. Skimming boats worked to remove the oil. The transfer of oil remaining aboard the Exxon Valdez to the Ex xon Baton Rouge resumed late Sat urday. The Coast guard said about 84,000 gallons of oil an hour was be ing transferred; at that rate, the un loading could take seven days. About 11,000 barrels of oil was re moved Saturday, but pumping was halted quickly because more oil wai leaking. Tests were under way to deter mine if dispersal chemicals should be used despite the potential foren vironmental damage. The agents need wave action to help brealup the thick crude oil. Weather hi been calm since the accident, but tilt National Weather Service said tht wind was expected to increase to2i mph and stir up a 5- to 6-foot chop on the sound. Waves may make it more difficult to skim oil off the water, said Coast Guard Lt. Ed Wieliczkiewicz. Foreclosures down, rent up in Houston HOUSTON (AP) — Retail rental rates were up and foreclo sures were down last year as con ditions improved for Houston shopping center owners. “Everything is pointing in the upward direction,” said Can Cairns of Revac, a Houston real estate research firm. Revac reported that foreclo sures of Houston shopping cen ters dropped nearly 50 percent last year. Foreclosures, or the sale of centers in lieu of foreclosure, declined from 123 in 1987 tohh in 1988, Revac said. “Increased investor activity coupled with Houston’s improv ing economy points to a brighter picture overall for Houston-area shopping centers in 1989,” Cairns said in a summary of Revac’s 1989 retail survey. Revac said eight centers, with a total of 1.3 million square feet, were constructed in 1988, a 78 percent increase over 1987. Six centers totaling 985,822 square feet were under construction as of Jan. 1. Revac reported that 77.6 per cent of Houston’s shopping cen ter space was occupied at the end of 1988, a slight improvement over occupancy rates at mid- 1988. Pi Kappa Alpha Fraternit) The Pikes are now taking applications for the 989-1990 Women of TAMU Academic Calendar Send Pictures and a short bio to: Pi Kappa Alpha Calendar Girls P.O. Box 4396 College Station, Texas 77844 Mail-in deadline April 7th. 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