Battalion Classifieds Can 845-2611 f- LUNCH BUFFET ALL YOU CAN EAT Great Pizza, ^mohc & Salad Bar $Q89 11AM - 2PM Daily 326 Jersey St. 211 University Carter Creek 696-DAVE 268-DAVE 846-DAVE Page 4 The Battalion Tuesday, September 12,1989 PS/2 Rules "Take No Survivors" Basketball Tournament Registration will open September 5th and close September 19th at the Micro Computer Center from 9:00a.m. - 6:00p.m. Look for registration tables at Sbisa Dining Hall the 12th - 14th. Registration fee - $15 per team. Register for prizes to be given away at the IBM FAIR September 25th-26th MSC Room 212 From 9:00a.m. - 4:30p.m. 3 ON 3 TOURNAMENT 22&23 OF SEPTEMBER MicroComputerCenter Computer Sales and Supplies Located on the main floor of the Memorial Student Center Monday thru Friday 7:45a.m. - 6:00p.m. (409) 845-4081 For more information contact Frank Munoz at 845-4081 \^G TH(j j % SKATING RINK Travis Landing 1673 Briarcrest Drive Bryan, Texas 77802 774-4807 PUBLIC SKATING SCHEDULE Daytime Session Evening Session Monday Closed Monday Closed Tues thru Fri 3:30-6:00 pm $3.75 Tues thru Thurs 7:30-10:00 pm $3.75 Saturday 11:00-5:00 pm $4.00 Friday 7:30-11:30 pm $4.25 Sunday 1:00-5:00 pm $4.00 Saturday 7:30-11:30 pm $4.25 Sunday 7:30-10:00 pm $3.75 All prices include skate rental All Sessions and prices subject to change without notice $ 10FF with college student ID E. 29th EVERY Monday - Closed [Tuesday - Christian Music Night WEDNESDAY NIGHT j Wednesday - Adult Night i Sunday - Family Night Group Rates or Private Parties Available See Ronnie or Glenda for more info. Tl WiRRD MR.ZO^E, HOW po you EXPECT US TO GET AH 1 REAL TV ELXPEXI&A/CE. \H0niHG HERE Id AH ALIEH SHIP TV STATIOH? ...AA/P /WTO// P0W//EY ‘S GUESTS FOR CELEBmV AWD A//P EARTHWORM API—1 © 1989 by Scott McGill^ 'j n Adventures In Cartooning by Don Atkinson Jr, THE CLASS WAS CMlV FILLED BV COUNTRS MU5/C FAVS AND f\ FCVJ dlUIM DCSPCRPTUy GOING THROUGH LAST- SECOND REGISTRATION!... ^HERE'S ON£! fmm BRAIN SURGCRr! * N0' > OAAN... "UQN TmiNG ?",.. NO? HOW ABOUT "OWH SURVIVAL?''... "GCm IW- ino?"... "Demy av FIRING SQUAD 7 '' SP^DE PH ILL IPS , R L '/\fl*\a<\*AAc>ri''-tht (Zncti) parry in history.. AAHH THE flt/M wHrRE's’ 0 THE B W M ^ Th* rum fen- the M^of.an MtAitabrS, HlHGDorA F>R A QoUlE o* V ^ # ty Mal¥- ffi SPADE/ 5e>*yeone Took -the R»>m i They Ve fjof to Lav* ff toT tbit"tdoo*Y :, l‘ 3, \ , J. / ° Moti (ators. SP/IDEl Snap ooiof... Key, toLafi in that °fn( /\PPel Tjish Mom/ X sweAp/ More inmates sent to hospital with symptoms of infection HOUSTON (AP) — Eleven Harris County Jail in mates remained hospitalized Monday with symptoms similar to a bacterial infection that killed two inmates last week, a hospital spokesman said. Two inmates were admitted Monday morning, while the others were hospitalized over the weekend, Nora Shire, spokesman for Ben Taub Hospital, said. One prisoner remains in critical condition, she said. The others are in fair condition and are suffering flu-like symptoms, Shire said. None of the inmates hospitalized at Ben Taub was identified. Preliminary autopsy results indicate that inmates Ricky LaBreck, 30, and Rene Puentes, 21, had con tracted pneumococcus or pneumococcal sepsis, a bacte rial infection that affects the lungs. Lanny Chopin, jail medical administrator, county authorities have not uncovered a con® source of the infection. LaBreck and Fuentes were housed in separatece!f| locks on the ninth floor, officials said. HP- “To my knowledge, they (the ill prisoners) caljM j from different areas of the jail,” Shire said. Meanwhile, jail inmates say they have been panic since the outbreak began last week, as guards! portedly shun those with runny noses and otnenyn gio toms of the pneumococcus bacteria infection, “This thing is either going to kill us, or we’re^ kill each other,” inmate Mike Reese said of the inn® f rustration. Reese was a cellmate of LaBreck, wl from the illness Thursday. Gulf States Utilities says increase is AUSTIN (AP) — Gulf States Uti lities Co. president Linn Draper told the Public Utility Commission Mon day that his company is trying to be fair to ratepayers and shareholders in its proposed $67.5 million electric rate increase. “I believe that if this proposition is accepted, it will . . . balance the inter ests of the shareholders of the com pany and the ratepayers who live in an area that’s been economically troubled for some time,” said Draper, who is also chief executive officer and chairman of the Beau mont-based utility. The proposal includes an $88 mil lion rate increase. That increase however would be reduced by a fuel refund to $67.5 million. Under the proposal, residential customers’ rates would rise from $79.67 to $85.50 for 1,000 kilowatt-hours. But 14 cities participating in the PUC hearing nave passed ordi nances to cut GSU’s rates 3.5 per cent, a $14.4 million reduction if a plied systemwide. The cities are Conroe, Cut and Shoot, Cleveland, Somerville, Port Neches, Groves, Nederland, West Orange, Orange, Vidor, China, Bevil Oaks, Bridge City and Colmes- neil. GSU has filed a lawsuit to keep rates at the current level pending a commission ruling in the rate case. Grace Casstevens, attorney for the cities, said during a break in the hearing that financial forecasts show the company’s condition “is great, especially after 1992.” “They’ve now got cash coming out of their ears,” Casstevens said. One forecast shows that with no rate in crease, the company will have $1.4 billion in cash on hand in the late 1990s, she said. Draper acknowledged after com pleting his testimony that GSU’s fi nancial picture has improved, but he said that trying to make it look rosy is “sort of putting rouge on the corpse.” “Certainly it’s in their interest to make us look as good as they can,” he said. “That’s a tough job . . . We haven’t paid dividends in three years.” Draper said he would not predict when the company might be able to resume paying dividends, but Casstevens said, “The financial fore casts show that with no rate incre* at all, they can make up all theirf ferred dividends and start pa)t common dividends after 1992.' A key part of GSU’s so-calledS gional Recovery Plan, which eludes the proposed rate increase for the commission to re-exa® $1.4 billion in River Bend nucif power plant construction costs pending in a previous rate case. In that previous case, the PUC lowed the company to pass anotfc $1.6 billion in costs to customers. Two teens found dead in car outside of Conroi i bo\ anc anr ruts Souk Tl of L< at lea Al mam worn also 1 Po ap- HOUSTON (AP) — Two missing teen-agers were found shot to death near Conroe in what investigators believe mav have been a murder-sui cide but relatives say is foul play. Montgomery County Sheriffs De partment spokesman Bob Morrison said bodies matching the descrip tions of Angela Renee Guenther, 15, of Shenandoah and Johnnie Wei- singer, 17, of Houston, were found in a 1979 blue Chevrolet Camaro near a creek south of Conroe Sun day. Each had been shot once in the head. Morrison said a small-caliber handgun in the car is believed to be Weisinger’s. Authorities are investi gating the possibility that the couple was shot in a murder-suicide. Relatives believed the couple met with foul play. “He never gave his parents problems,” Weisinger’s gra mother, Marie Weisinger, said, always had Angela home bycurfc That’s what’s so sad about all this Morrison said a conveniences! clerk remembered the cou| stopped for gasoline about midni Friday, and that a young man proached the couple in the park lot. The couple began dating abo i year ago while both attended Vj trip High School in HousH Guenther recently transferred McCullough High when her pare moved to the Shenandoah subd sion in The Woodlands, while'' singer was awaiting results ofaj 1 eral equivalency test so he cod pursue a career with the Co| Guard. I