CASH For Your Books at - LOUPOT‘S Bookstores Northgate • Southgate Redmond Terrace DELTA ZETA & CLICKS BILLIARDS present 1st Annual Pool Tournament April 1510-7 at Click's Billiards For Registration Call: 693-9621 or 696-8487 Benefits the Hearing Impaired Page 4 The Battalion MATHEMATICS CONTEST The annual Freshman and Sophomore Mathematics Contest will be held Thursday, April 13, 1989 from 7:30 PM to 9:30 PM. The Freshman Contest will be in Room 216 Milner Hall and the Sophomore Contest in 304 Milner Hall. No calculators - all test material will be provided. Prizes for winners of first place will be $100, second place $60, and third place $40. Prereq uisite for Freshman contest is knowledge of calculus through Math 253 or equivalent, for the Sophomore contest Knowl edge of calculus througth math 253 or equivalent. Thursday, April 13,1989 by Scott McCullai BLATT, THEKE'VE. B£EV RUtA0P5 THAT V0RPVILLE IS FMLLY GETTING AH ICECREAM PAKLOK. IS THAT TRUE? ,s T ^ WELL, MERRITT, YOU CANT BELIEVE WILP RUNI0KS LIKE THAT. AN ICE CREA/A PARLOR IN VORPVILLEL? WHY THAT'S... t?0 X REALLY HAVE TO STAMP BEHINP THIS WlVPOW? Thursc Waldo by Kevin Thomas l SELieve. Too must BE TO SCME. Ttl^ CT AU 1US.EC.T by Paul Kilroy’s friends call him ambitious, ‘typical kid’ AUSTIN (AP) — Mark Kilroy’s friends at the Uni versity of Texas describe the pre-med junior as a “typ ical kid” whose ambition to go to medical school drove him to succeed. “School came first to him and he knew how to draw that line,” Frank J. Padula, Kilroy’s neighbor and a se nior history major at UT-Austin, said. “He was just an average, typical incoming kid. He was nervous, he wanted to meet some girls, but he knew he had school work to do.” ber him winning all kinds of math and science awards ! know he was confident about school. There was no doubt in my mind he would get into medical school.” Shead said she was in shock when she heard Kilroy’s body had been found, and she found it hard to compre hend that he may have been sacrificed in a satanic cult ritual. 990 NACHO & VEGGIE BAR Thursday Night. Drink Specials Nightly 9:30-11:00 pm 764-2975 Paul Dugas, a neighbor and friend of Kilroy, said classwork was very important to the 21-year-old stu dent, whose mu.tilated body was found with 11 others west of Matamoros, Mexico, on Tuesday. “He used to come over for dinner and he would be completely exhausted, and it wasn’t from physical activ ity; it would be from studying to his capacity,” Dugas said. Tammy Shead, who attended Santa Fe High School with Kilroy, said he was always trying to be the best. “He was very intelligent, a super-smart guy,” Shead, a UT psychology junior, said. “In high school I remem- “I don’t remember hearing about satanism in high school,” Shead said. “You don’t expect one of your good friends to be an innocent victim of it.” University president William Cunningham said the school shared the grief of Kilroy’s family and friends. “This is a tragedy for the Kilroy family and the uni versity,” Cunningham said. “Mark was an excellent stu dent who had a great deal to offer our state and nation. The entire university community joins Mark’s family in their sorrow.” Ronald Brown, vice president for student affairs, said the university will offer counseling to Kilroy’s fam ily and friends. “Our sympathy goes to the family,” Brown said. On Harvey Road Behind Safeway —The OrhcR Eclips Hair • Skin • Nails Introduces Sonia Long Robert Whitimeli Formerly of Albert’s Hair Design, is from Billing ML She specializes in creatioe hair designs spiral perm G corrective color. Formerly from San Antonio brings you: -complete European deep pore cleaning -facial waxing -leg & bikini waxing Misty Raines Formerly from MSC styling Center, specializes in highlights & perm, plus men G women styles. Officials: Murdered millionaire more than merely monogamous DALLAS (AP) — As a millionaire wholesaler and retailer, Harold E. “Jack” McCollum had a yen for travel but it wasn’t always to manage his far-flung enterprises, according to authorities who claim he headed households in different cities. More than two years after McCol lum was slain on the banks of the Navasota River in East Texas, inves tigators are no closer to solving the crime. But they say the businessman had been married to at least four women at the same time. vive the controversy over the slaying. “He was a great man, very intelli gent, with high standards, out wardly,” he said. “But he was a sick man — mentally sick. He had a quirk about him. Outside of that, he was normal.” Wilson said that until recently, in vestigators were still pursuing leads in the slaying. “It came to a dead end,” he said. “We worked on a little lead about three weeks ago. It’s turned out to be nothing so far.” Wilson said Jack McCollum’s slay ing was unrelated to the June 1988 slayings of four people in Houston and Irving, including former mem bers of a polygamist cult. Before his 1986 death, McCollum was leading a double life with mar riages to Angeline McCollum of Dal las and Marguerite McCollum of Waco, and neither family knew about the other for 29 years, said Leon County Sheriff Royce Wilson. “You would think, over those years, that there would be some medical problems — maybe the flu or a heart attack — that would cause somebody to suspect something, but there was none,” Wilson said. “He just was marrying and getting di vorces.” Investigators found evidence that McCollum had been married at least 10 times over a half-century, the sheriff said. “We finally stopped counting then,” said Wilson. He said the 68-year-old business man apparently juggled the differ ent marriages by telling his families his enterprises forced him to travel constantly. Robert McCollum, the business man’s brother and former partner who now runs his own Waco tire company, said he did not want to re- Judge orders arrest of probation violator DALLAS (AP) — A 27-year- old Dallas man who confessed a probation violation to what he be lieved was a sympathetic state judge was shocked when the judge ordered him arrested. Thomas G. Jones was sen tenced last month to 10 years pro bation after pleading guilty to robbery and unauthorized use of a motor vehicle. At the time, state District Judge Larry Baraka told Jones to come to him if he needed help. So when Jones had trouble continuing a court-ordered drug treatment program, he showed up in Baraka’s courtroom. “He thought I would just talk sweet to him,” Baraka told the Dallas Times Herald. “When I put him in custody, he got scared and broke and ran.” Bailiffs chased Jones down the hall from the fifth floor court room and cornered him in an other courtroom. Jones had told the court’s pro bation officer the drug treatment sessions the judge ordered were too tough, so he stopped attend- AiA£ C4 v xOidLlOli Oi Ilia pi uuaiiOll. When the officer took Jones before the judge, who was busy with an unrelated jury trial, Bar aka told bailiffs to find Jones a seat. But when bailiffs asked where, Baraka replied: “It doesn’t matter. He’s in your cus tody now.” Hearing that, Jones bolted from the courtroom with bailiff Nolan Davidson in hot pursuit. Davidson cornered and hand cuffed Jones, eventually return ing the sheepish-looking prisoner to Baraka’s courtroom. “I told him he was acting like a real weakling and it was time for him to be a man,” said Baraka, who told Jones he should have known he could be arrested when he came in confessing a probation violation. “I know, sir,” Jones told Bar aka. “I just lost my head.” But Baraka gave in — some what. Rather than sending Jones to prison, he allowed him to con tinue on probation provided Jones attends a different drug- treatment program. WOMEN’S STUDII speak about “Post- C. Evans Library. PHI BETA LAMBC Rob’s house. MACINTOSH USE p.m.in 101 Hermar MSC HOSPITALIT Rudder fountain. TAMU MICROBIOI of Disease from K Rudder. SOCIETY OF PRC vention and to elecl STUDENT Y: will h PRE-THEOLOGY Speaks,” a one-ma LATIN AMERICAr* sues in Spanish at I NARCOTICS ANC 0280 for more infor ADULT CHILDREI more details. ALCOHOLICS AN for more informatio THE BATTALION Reed McDonald. E (ions are due April N.O.W.: will preset STUDY ABROAD are due by 5 p.m. ir OFF CAMPUS AG flee. CORPS OF CADE on the quad. Then Duncan. INTERVARSITY C on Mission’s at? p. MELTING POT: w ceptions of the Unil DATA PROCESSI sions are due by 5 | ALCOHOLICS AN for more informatio AGGIE BLOOD D the following locati MSClOa.m.-6p.i AGGIELAND: Sta April 19. Items for What's U l no later than three the name and phoi a Battalion service on a first-come, firs have questions, ca ‘Stun gun’ A presentatio willl be given by gies Austin repi lotte Clemmons the College Sta Center. The presentai A&M cad( About 150 Ar from Texas A&] State University Austin State Un ticipate in a joir 14-16 near Easte The purpose to prepare cadet dor 1989, an z camp in Ft. Rile mer. It is also the n in achieving thei the gold bar of : ant in the U.S. A Johnson, assista military science viser, said. The three-ph; program reseml Science Fc Dr. Bassam Z sistant director engineering edu tional Science speak tonight at der. Shakhashiri “Developing a Enhance the Q Education in Art Known for vision show, Christmas Chee #0 (Bausc 79 £ $99 o ° $0000 E SALE C£ with 1stpr CHARLES C. S DOCTOR 707 South T< College St 1 block South 00) * Ev A