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About The Battalion. (College Station, Tex.) 1893-current | View Entire Issue (Sept. 27, 1989)
r27,is Vednesday, September 27,1989 The Battalion Page 5 nor Atioii "’ho ini Host I. said I; ,e Sinhis iber th. 'Hsedbii tox lidacvic phis'Hi Ausiiii, ey iincffon, 4 has mu e race, m Rich H'theDc June, I lead I7 be ,024 m Rida m, fon 23 pem 'em. >m ll dering d wheih lent Tib rsy coni: ishedSi img Mi lattoxa in issue reated I: and recow iuld be n. Wes eampaif campii; jx’s com toeffed ise on mader lism iht JimJli ake ani 1 " spofc ntei p ,Ri The following incidents were reported to the University Police Department between Sept. 18 I and Sept. 22. j CRIMINAL TRESPASS: • Three students were stopped by officers as they exited the roof area of the Academic Building. The trio reported that they were just looking around. The incident was referred to Stu dent Affairs. FELONY THEFT: • A 1985 CMC pickup was sto len from Sippel Road. • Copper wire, speaker wire and Simplex smoke detectors were stolen from the McKenzie Terminal Building, which is un der construction at Easterwood Airport. • A student’s gray 1988 Chev rolet Camaro was stolen from Parking Area 9. MISDEMEANOR THEFT: • A wallet and pair of shoes were stolen from an unsecured locker at Cain Pool. • A Bausch 8c Lomb dissecting microscope was stolen from a room in the Veterinary Medical Complex. • Four backpacks were stolen from different buildings around campus. • A student’s wallet was stolen from her backpack, which she had left unsecured on the fourth floor of Langford Architecture Building. Officers found the wal let in the men’s restroom on the same floor, minus the cash. • Twelve bicycles were stolen from various locations around the campus. • A woman was arrested in connection with the theft of seve ral rings from the first floor wom en’s restroom of Rudder Tower. Only one ring has been recov ered. PUBLIC INTOXICATION: • Officers found a student passed out in the dirt alongside Jones street. He was arrested and charged with public intoxication and failure to identify himself. The incident was referred to Stu dent Affairs. BURGLARY OF A HABITA TION: • A telephone answering ma chine was stolen from McFadden Hall. BURGLARY OF A MOTOR VEHICLE: © A checkbook was stolen from a student’s vehicle. HARASSMENT: • A student was positively identified as the person who had been making annoying phone calls to a room in Clements Hall since Sept. 2. CRIMINAL MISCHIEF: • Graf fiti was scribbled on the walls of the Hensel Park men’s restroom. • A car antenna was broken off in Parking Area 48. Prosecution concludes case in AIDS trial UVALDE (AP) — Prosecution tes timony ended Tuesday after a 15- year-old boy described his homosex ual relations with a 43-year-old Cor pus Christi man charged with sex ually assaulting the teen-ager and infecting him with the AIDS virus. Thomas Anthony Zule could face a maximum penalty of life in prison if convicted of aggravated sexual as sault in the trial. The case is the first known pros ecution of its type in Texas, legal ex perts say, because the accusation of infecting the boy with the AIDS vi rus upgraded the charge to an “ag gravated” offense. A judge has barred anyone younger than 17 from attending the trial that on Monday included the viewing of a videotape showing Zule and the boy in bed. Zule’s defense attorney. Bill May of Corpus Christi, tried to block the videotape from being shown, saying it would he prejudicial to Zule’s rights and would not help prove the charge against Zule. Prosecutor Michael Hummell, a Nueces County assistant district at torney, argued successfully that the tape should be considered as evi dence that a sexual relationship existed between Zule and the youth. The trial was moved to Uvalde be cause of pretrial publicity in Corpus Christi. American move to Love Field :ould thwart D-FW expansion DALLAS (AP) — An American irlines expansion of operations to )allas Love Field could force plan- dlvou, 1 iers at Dallas-Port Worth Interna- Hitliik i ona i Airport to shelve part of a l lc ' T® uiltibillion-dollar expansion, D-FW fficials said. Anew$l billion American termi- tl and much of a 20-year master Ian might get die ax if the airline xpands to Love Field, Oris Dun am, D-FW executive director, said luring a special airport hoard brief- igon the master plan. Robert Crandall, chairman of Jealth issues kill be focus of KAMU show 3yTodd Swearingen Df The Battalion Staff The American Medical Students’ Association and the Texas A&M College of Medicine are presenting Fall Lecture Series on Preventive Medicine,” to be broadcast by CAMU-TV Cable 31 Thursdays rom noon to 12:50. Patricia Joyce, president of AMSA, said the series is being pre- ented to promote community uvareness of important health is- ;ues. Joyce said the lecture topics mphasize diet, child and prenatal are, alcohol and drug prevention, AIDS prevention and environmen- |al health risks. “All of this is just to make people iware of what they can do on their )art to prevent any kind of diseases )r infections they may get in the fu- ure,’’Joyce said. A&M professors and area medical lectors will present the lectures in 60 Joe H. Reynolds Medical Sci- nces Building. The public is en- ouraged to attend and ask ques- ions, Joyce said. The lectures are resented with the layman in mind, nd beginning next week, a phone [lumber will be provided during the iroadcast to allow the television au- iience to ask questions, she said. For information contact Joyce at H5-2887. The upcoming lectures are: • Sept. 28: High Fiber Diets in fealtb • Oct. 5: Prenatal Care • Oct. 12: Exercise & Longevity • Oct. 19: Alcohol 8c Drug Pre- ention • Oct. 26: Air Pollution: Hold our Breath • Nov. 9: AIDS Prevention The LSAT Is In * \ " v J- V ■ . L . V:’ 10 Weeks. plANUEY H. KAPLAN tS Take Kaplan Or Take Your Chances Classes Start Oct. 3 Call 696-Prep AMR Corp., American’s parent, will be briefed on D-FW’s revised 20- year plan Thursday, Dunham told the Dulhis limes Herald. Crandall recently said American would schedule flights from Love, Field if Congress repeals the Wright amendment, which limits service at the municipal airport to flights within Texas and its four border states. Some congressional delegates from Kansas have asked for changes in the restriction. “In the event that the Wright amendment is repealed, and a movement of flights, i.e. scheduled service, was to occur . . . the airport board would have to take a second look at the $3.5 billion proposed ex pansion the board was briefed on Monday,” Joe Dealey, D-FW airport spokesman, said. American spokesman Ed Stewart said D-FW’s stance was unexpected. “So much of that is wait-and-see,” Stewart said. “We know some action is already taking place at the federal level. But the bottom line is we will have to be competitive, no matter what happens. “We want to work with all parties, but at the same time we have a re sponsibility to our shareholders, ourselves and the public to be the best airline we can be, and that means being competitive.” The expansion plan presented to D-FW board members was devel oped through the year 2010 and could double the airport’s capacity. The plan, in addition to the new American terminal, calls for two new runways and redesigning and re building three other terminals, plus adding a rail line and roadway links. Following the briefing, Dunham said the large terminal for American would be scrapped if the airline moved some operations to Love Field, which is eight miles closer to downtown Dallas. “We wouldn’t build the terminal,” he said. “You would see us scale down” expansion planSj including plans for two new ruiiways at D-FW Airport. “You have 400 (American) flights (at D-FW), and (Crandall’s) talking about 230” flights being operated out of Love Field, Dunham said.“There’s no reason” to move forward with such major plans if American began operating out of Love Field, he said. Earlier this month, Crandall told security analysts in New York City that American will do “what we need to do to win at Love Field,” possibly including 230 flights daily from there if all the restrictions on the air port were lifted. Houston pilot crashes, dies in Louisiana woods ABITA SPRINGS, La. (AP) — A pilot from Houston apparently died on impact when his light plane crashed in woods near the Greater St. Tammany Airport, the St. Tammany Parish sheriff’s office said Tuesday. Extricating equipment was used to get the 34-year-old man’s body from the wreckage of his Cessna 210, which crashed Mon day evening about one-and-a-half miles west of the airport near Abita Springs, sheriff's office spokesman Larry Ciko said. Two of three dogs in the plane apparently survived. Ciko said the pilot operated a parachute center called Skydive Texas outside of Houston with his girlfriend, and was coming to Abita Springs to pk:k her up and to give lier father a golden re triever puppy. “He had with him three golden retrievers — two puppies and the mother,” Ciko said. “One puppy was found alive, uninjured; one puppy was dead in the plane, and there’s no indication of the mo ther.” Civil Air Patrol Ft. Col. Jay Malbrough said investigators be lieved that poor weather and the pilot’s lack of experience may have caused the crash. “He hatl about 170 hours fly ing time,” Marlbrough said. ”He wasn’t an instrument pilot and the weather was marginal. . . . There was a low ceiling, low clouds, and he could have gotten in a cloud and become diso riented.” Ciko said the plane was moving almost parallel to the airport run way when it crashed into about half a dozen pine trees. Debris was scattered for about 100 yards behind the body of the plane, Malbrough said. Ciko said a radio operator in the sheriff's office received an unconfirmed report that some one from another plane had heard a distress call from the fall- ing plane. ^ r Big Screen TV Beer Garden Pool Darts Wed. Special $2.75 Pitcher Beer 1313 S. College 822-2672 ' MEAT SCIENCE AND TECHNOLOGY CENTER DEPARTMENT OF ANIMAL SCIENCE OPEN SATURDAYS ON HOME FOOTBALL GAME DAYS!! * EXTRA TRIM BEEF, LAMB, AND PORK * HICKORY SMOKED BACON, HAM, BEEF JERKY, SAUSAGE, AND PORK CHOPS * BRATWURST, SUMMER SAUSAGE, AND BEEF STICK * SAUSAGE AND CHEESE GIFT BOX * MILK, CHEESE, ICE CREAM AND MALTS SEPTEMBER SPECIALS PRICES EFFECTIVE WHILE SUPPLIES LAST OR THROUGH SEPTEMBER 30, t SOS BEEF RUMP ROASTS BONELESS CLOSED TRIMMED $1.79 per lb. (30-40 lb. box) Reg. $2.85 per lb. $1.99 per lb. (less than 30 lbs.) PORK LOIN CHOPS ASSORTED CHOPS, 1 INCH THICK, 4/PKG $1.89 per lb. (30-40 lb. box) Reg $2.29 per lb. $2.09 per lb. (less than 30 lbs.) HICKORY SMOKED BACON THICKED SLICED, 1 LB. PKG. $1.69 per lb. (10 lb. box) Reg. $2.49 per lb. $1.89 per lb. (less than 10 lbs.) W 9 I l PL, V-._... fes/ \ '5 4 PHONE: 409/ 845-5651 MONDAY -FRIDAY 9AM-6PM kinko's the copy center (as of October 1st) T kinkoi U R4fi-ft791 509 University Drive “ ■ (across from Blocker) ©yOd ^©y Ofe S® towtsfl £@ CldBraaGD^ gu©^ Sye’inmsB 3 ? as a cultural exchange student in coordination with the Georg August University in Gottingen, West Germany. Trip is from May 22 to June 19, 1990. Fluency in German is not required. Program is strictly a cultural exchange. Room and board will be provided by host families. Reside in the city of Gottingen. Trips to other locations in Germany. taf©irmMicQW?a! imi©@S5ifi)§ October 2,1989 in room 404 Rudder at 8:30 p.m. in room 223G MSC Browsing Library Due-October 9,1989 at 5:00 p.m. MSC Jordan Institute for International Awareness SUPERCUTS / The Nation’s #1 Hair Styling Salon Now open in Culpepper Plaza! Supercut - $8 • Students & Professors with I.D.-$7 • Children 13 and under-$6 Introductory Offer for Texas A&M Students & Faculty Bennigan’s Texas Ave. Supercuts $2.00 off | Safeway Harvey Rd. A Regular $8.00 Supercut with this coupon Expires Oct. 18,1989 Mon.-Fri. 9-9 Sat. 9-8 Sun. 10-6 CALL 696-1155 1519 S. Texas (Between Bennigans and Cowhop Junction) - Culpepper Plaza