The Battalion. (College Station, Tex.) 1893-current, September 20, 1989, Image 4

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TAMU SURF CLUB
Page 4
The Battalion
Wednesday, September 20,
3-Man Volleyball Tournament
men’s/women’s Swimsuit Contest
Sponsored by:
°o>
Gold’s Gym Corrigan’s Jewelry
MORE INFO:
Andy 693-2178
Tehren 696-2407
Steve 847-3595
Volleyball
Prizes: 1st-$100 Cash
2nd-$50 Cash
Limited to 1 st 24 Tearns
Sign-up in MSC Lobby
through Friday 12-4 p.m.
DATE: Sat. Sept 23
TIME: Volleyball-11:30 a.m. Swimsuit-5:00 p.
PLACE: SNEAKERS SPORTS BAR
Swimsuit
Prizes: Women’s 1st 14K Gold ATM
Pendant and Chain ($120 value)
Men’s Ist-Semester membership at
Gold’s Gym
FREE SIGN UP
anytime up until Contest at 5 p.m.
m.
504 Harvey Rd
MSC JORDAN FELLOWS PROGRAM
,3
V
FELLOWS:
attend seminars on international topics
visit consulates and museums in Texas
are awarded grants for international travel
in support of independent research,
study, or internship
APPLICATIONS ARE AVAILABLE in room 223-G
of the Browsing Library and are due by
September 27,1989 at 5:00 pm
MSC Jordan Institute for International Awareness
Room 223-F Browsing Library in the MSC
845-8770
beer!
It’s okay to jrationalizel
••'/ 1 '4 '
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I'S
VJZZM
XT’S All
303 W. University Ave. • 846-1616
LADY AGGIE VOLLEYBALL
TEXAS A&M
vs.
LAMAR
Wed., Sept. 20
7:30 p.m.
G. Rollie White Coliseum
250 HOT DOG
NIGHT!
Sponsored by Bryan Coca-Cola
(Doors open at 6:30 p.m.)
Support the LADY AGGIES!
W<
Sixth Street
closes to cars;
reviews mixed
IN ADVANCE
w
A&M group sponsors racial issues discussion
AUSTIN (AP) — A police experi
ment that closed Austin’s Sixth
Street nightclub strip to motor vehi
cles last weekend is getting mixed re
views.
Restaurant owners who were dis
pleased about the measure said their
customers stayed away for fear of
not finding parking places.
Bar owners, however, were more
happy about the the closing of the
street, and said their customers
showed up to drink beer and check
out bands.
The experiment banned parking
after 7 p.m. and traffic after 8 p.m.
on the stretch of East Sixth.
Price Fielden, general manager of
Steamboat 1874, said his restaurant
suffered one of its worst weekends
for a September.
“Our clientele figured they
couldn’t find a parking place, so they
didn’t come down,” he said.
For Joe Bates, owner of Joe’s Ge
neric Bar, it was a different story.
“Our business was up 25 percent,”
Bates said.
Less congested sidewalks and lack
of traffic in barricaded streets
helped attract customers, he said.
Deputy police chief Kenny Wil
liams said the experiment will con
tinue.
The second weekend of the pilot
project will include fine-tuning that
should help restaurants refill their
dining rooms, he said.
Traffic will be allowed on Sixth
Street until 9 p.m. this Friday and
Saturday, Williams said.
Texas A&M University’s Multi
cultural Services Center will pre
sent “Racism 101,” a PBS Front
line Video Thursday, Sept. 21 in
305 Rudder. The one-hour video
will be shown at noon and will be
followed by a discussion.
Lorinda Beckmann, senior sec
retary of the center, said that the
video features incidents that oc
curred at the University of Massa
chusetts and the University of
Michigan, and is intended to pro
mote awareness of racial issues.
“It’s a really good video-
will definitely make an impactonl
the viewer,” Beckmann said, "li
gives both students’ points of vieJ
— the minority point of viewandf
the Anglo point of view, onrac-l
ism and on the incidents thathapJ
pened at different campuses.”
Those interested in attendin;|
should contact Beckmann at 8-
4551 by 11 a.m. Thursday,
cause of limited seating arrange j
ments.
w/
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pre:
WAl
PAI If'F RFATI
Concerned
officials try
DWI slogan
AUSTIN (AP) — Concerned
about a nine percent increase in the
number of driving-while-intoxicated
deaths, state officials have decided to
give motorists a sign — “DWI . . .
You Can’t Afford It.”
The new slogan is the foundation
of a pilot project started by the
Texas Department of Highways and
Public Transportation and the
Texas Commission on Alcohol and
Drug Abuse.
The project was prompted by
agency officials’ fears that the anti-
DWI efforts of recent years may be
losing momentum in Texas.
Last year, 1,363 people were
killed in wrecks, involving drunken
drivers statewide, a nine percent in
crease from 1987 when 1,250 people
died in DWI wrecks.
“There was a big anti-DWI push a
few years ago, but publicity has died
down somewhat,” Bob Dickson, ex
ecutive director of the Commission
on Alcohol and Drug Abuse, said.
State officials said they believed
that* reminding Texans of the costs
associated with drinking and driving
may help get their attention.
DWI cost the state $450 million in
1988 in lost productivity and prop
erty loss, officials said.
A person convicted of DWI faces
an average cost of $3,200 in attor
neys fees, fines, probation fees and
court costs, according to a Highway
Department traffic specialist.
The following incidents were
reported to the University Police
Department between Sept. 8 and
Monday.
INDECENT EXPOSURE:
• A man exposed his genitalia
to a cleaning woman in the Hal-
bouty Building and made a sex
ually offensive remark.
CRIMINAL MISCHIEF:
• Two students tried to cut
down a tree on the east side of
Moses Hall because it blocked
their view. Officers arrived on
scene, but were unable to posi
tively identify the persons re
sponsible. The case was referred
to Student Affairs.
• A man reported that some
one poured sand on top of his
desk in the Old Engineering
Building and scattered his papers
around the room.
• An obscene message was
painted on the wall of the men’s
restroom at Hensel Park.
• Four juveniles were pushing
each other on mopeds which
were parked in the Aston Hall
bike racks.
AGGRAVATED ASSAULT:
• Four students accosted two
students in Parking Area 62 while
leaving Midnight Yell Practice.
One of the victims suffered a bro
ken nose and cheekbone in the at
tack. The two instigators will be
issued a Class A assault citation,
punishable by one year in jail
and/or a $2,000 fine.
ASSAULT:
• A student reported that
someone drove by in a car and
threw an egg, striking him in the
back.
MISDEMEANOR THEFT:
• A black tarp was stolen from
a student’s pickup truck while
parked on Coke Street.
• Two keys off a student’s key
ring were stolen from a study car
rel on the fourth floor of the li
brary.
• Two checks were stolen
from a Crocker Hall resident’s
checkbook.
• A Corning hot plate stirrer
was taken from the Biological Sci
ence Building West.
• A Nalgene Carboy plastic
water tank was stolen from an un
locked room in the Horticulture-
/Forest Science Building.
• A tan car cover was taken off
a student’s car while in Parking
Area 40.
• Nine backpacks were stole:
— most of which were taker,
while left unsecured in thelibran
and dining areas.
• Ten cones that were beint
used to divide traffic lanes onJoe
Routt Boulevard were stolen
• Thirteen bicycles were sto
len from various locations around
the campus.
• Pedals were stolen off a stu
dent’s bicycle while it was parked
at the Aerospace Engineering-
/Computer Science Building.
UNAUTHORIZED USE OF!
MOTOR VEHICLE:
• A student’s scooter was re
moved from Parking Area 39and
later found on Jones Street will
no apparent damage to the
scooter.
BURGLARY OF A MOTOE
VEHICLE:
• A TAMU parking hang-ta|
and cassette tapes were stolen
from a locked vehicle in Parking
Area 56.
• On the same day, in a nearln
lot, a TAMU parking hang-tag
was stolen from a car parked®
Parking Area 55.
• A reserved staff parking
hang-tag was stolen fromacarin
Parking Area 55.
• A rope was stolen from a cat
parked on Coke Street.
FELONY:
• A Sony video camera was
stolen from a room in Harrington
Tower.
BURGLARY OF BUILDING:
• A Sanyo microwave oven
was stolen from A-2 Lounge.
• A Microbot Teachmova
Model TCM Was stolen from a
room in Thorrtlason Hall.
PUBLIC INTOXICATION:
• A student was cited for pub
lic intoxication after police re
sponded to a disturbance at Law
Hall.
• Officers were called to the
A. P. Beutel Health Center where
they were told that a student had
been brought in with a cut to his
arm. Police found him to bet
toxicated and cited him for public
intoxication.
MINOR IN POSSESSION:
• Three students were giver,
citations of MI P’s after police saw
them with a keg of beer in
vehicle. Police pulled them over
because “none of the subjects ap
peared to be 21 years of age.”
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First Meeting Fee S 805
Regular Price Total 5280.
YOU SAVE S17.00
Offer ends Sept. 30,1989
Joyce Nimetz,
Area Director
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359-313
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This could be the SMARTEST eight dollars you ever spent! Better join today!
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Tue: 6:30 pm
Wed: 11:30 am 5:00 pm
Thur: 5:15 pm
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