MEAT SCIENCE AND TECHNOLOGY CENTER DEPARTMENT OF ANIMAL SCIENCE CHEESE BURGER DAYS ! ! ; '^^^zzzzzzzzzzk QUARTER-POUND PATTIES 1 Pound Package $1.69 per lb. 10 Pound Box $1.49 per lb. TAMU HALF-POUND PATTIES 2 Pound Package $1.69 per lb. 12 Pound Box $1.49 per lb. CREAMERY’CHEESE £ ?> s until April 30, 1990. We are open for business Monday through Friday from 9:00 a.m. to 6:00 p.m. and from 9:00 a.m. to 1:00 ^ p.m. Saturday, April 14 and April 28. We are located on the West Campus between the Kleberg Center and the Horticulture- S /Forest Science Building. (Phone: 845-5651) ^ Chedder (Medium) Swiss Jalapeno $2.69 per lb. $3.29 per lb. $2.89 per lb. Other Beef, Lamb, Pork, Sausage, Dairy Products, and Farm Fresh Eggs are available. Prices effective while supplies last or V 3 2r222Z22222:^&222222222ZZ2222222Zzi DOUGLAS JEWLERS 1667-B Texas Ave. Culpepper Plaza 693-0677 Texas A&M University Watch by SEIKO A Seiko Quartz timepiece of- fically licensed by the Univer sity. Featuring a richly de tailed three-dimensional re creation of the University Seal on the 14 kt. gold fin ished dials. Electronic quartz movement guaranteed accu rate to within fifteen seconds per month. Satisfaction guar anteed or returnable for a full refund. Full three year Seiko warranty. Page 6 The Battalion Friday, April 6, IS The Restaurant Report The restaurants listed below were inspected by the Brazos County Health Department between March 26 and Friday. Information is from a food service es tablishment inspection report. SCORED BETWEEN 95 AND 100: Chinese Fast Food at 805B Wellborn Rd. Score — 97. Points were deducted for unsatisfactory mainte nance of non-food contact surfaces, unclean non food contact surfaces of equipment and utensils and unclean floors. It was a regularly scheduled inspec tion. SCORED BETWEEN 90 AND 94: Confucius Chinese Cuisine at 2322 Texas Ave. S. Score — 94. Points were deducted for improper food protection during storage and unprotected outer openings. The restaurant was inspected be cause of a customer complaint. University Towers at 410 Texas Ave. S. Score — 93. Points were deducted for improper food protec tion during storage, unprotected outer openings and unsatisfactory wall and ceiling construction. The restaurant was inspected because of a customer com plaint. Pizza Classics at 2406D Texas Ave. S. Score —92. Points were deducted for improperly maintained plumbing, unsatisfactory hand-drying devices, un protected outer openings and unsatisfactory wall and ceiling contruction. It was a regularly scheduled inspection. Southfork Restaurant at 3702 Texas Ave. S. Score — 91. Points were deducted for improper storage of food-dispensing utensils, unsatisfactory mainte nance of food-contact surfaces, unsatisfactory main tenance of non-food contact surfaces, unsatisfacton access to toilet and handwashing facilities and b' properly cleaned outside storage area enclosures.!! was a regularly scheduled inspection. David Jefferson, a registered sanitarian at ihei partment, said restaurants with scores of95orabo\t generally have excellent operations and facilities.Hi said restaurants with scores in the 70s or low Si usually have serious violations in the health report. Scores can be misleading, Jefferson said, becaun restaurants can get the same score by havingseveri minor violations or a few major violations. He sad the minor violations can be corrected during thein- spection. Point deductions or violations in the report range from one point (minor violations) to fii f points (major violations). Jefferson said the department might close a to. taurant if the score is below 60, the personnel kt t infectious diseases, the restaurant lacks adequateti- frigeration, there is a sewage backup in the building or the restaurant has a complete lack of sanitiutim for the food equipment. The department inspects each restaurant eren six months. Jefferson said a follow-up inspectiotn sometimes required if a restaurant has a four-or five-point violation that cannot be corrected duriin the inspection, or if there are numerous small viol), dons. Inspectors at the department are registeredSM’ tarians. Richards discounts allegation of drug use, blames opponent Associated Press Democratic gubernatorial candidate Ann Richards on Thursday denounced an unattributed allegation that she was in a restroom where several women ap peared to be smoking marijuana almost 11 years ago. “Do you think this country has reached the point now ... that unsubstantiated people can say what they want to and suddenly it takes on the vein of truth by appear ing on television and in the newspapers?” Richards said at a campaign stop in Dallas. Richards blamed her runoff opponent in Tuesday’s primary election, Attorney General Jim Mattox, for spreading rumors about alleged drug use. Mattox has said he possesses sworn statements from people who say they know Richards used illegal drugs in the past. But Mattox repeatedly has refused to reveal the names of those people or offer any other evidence to back up his drug accusations. The Houston Post on Thursday quoted a woman it didn’t identify as saying she had seen Richards with a group of women in the restroom of an Austin hotel during the National Association of Women in Con struction convention in 1979. The woman, who refused to tell her story units guaranteed that her name not be used, told theft*: “When you walked in the door you could smellthedei nite aroma of marijuana.” “When I walked in (Richards) put her hand bet her and held it,” she said. "The girl on the end, who did not know, had a roach or a joint that had bet: smoked down in her hand.” The Post report said the woman felt compelled ton count the incident after watching Richards refusedui ing televised debates to answer yes or no to the quest!® of whether she had ever used illegal drugs. Richards, a recovering alcoholic, has said she has: had an alcoholic drink nor a mood-altering chemical: 10 years. Asked about the alleged 1979 incident, the statetiti surer said, “I have no idea what they’re talkingaboui Richards said Thursday she was shocked theallcp lions had been reported. “The surprising part is t - now people are willing to put it in print, with no sal stantiation at all,” she said. “That’s not whatthiscoi: try is all about.” Bentsen: Printing errors, forms shortage threaten census accuracy in Texas WASHINGTON (AP) — Thou sands of Texas households may not be participating in the census be cause of “gross printing errors” and a shortage of Spanish-language forms, Sen. Lloyd Bentsen said Thursday. Bentsen, D-Texas, said the Cen sus Bureau has refused to correct its mistakes in Texas and has re sponded instead to complaints about the 1990 head count with excuses and explanations. “I must deplore the way the cen sus is being administered in Texas,” Bentsen told Census Bureau Direc tor Barbara Bryant in a letter Thurs day. “This is particularly true in El Paso, San Antonio, Corpus Christi and South Texas,” Bentsen said. “In these areas, complaints and prob lems abound which, if not cured im mediately, threaten the integrity of the census in Texas.” Comment from the Census Bu reau was not immediately available. Population estimates from the de cennial head count are used to de cide how millions of dollars in fed eral funds are spent on everything from education to highways, as well as a state’s representation in the U.S. House of Representatives. The Texas Comptroller’s Office estimates an undercount in 1980 cost Texas $300 million in federal funds throughout the 1980s, while a similar undercount this year could cost the state $500 million and a seat in the House, according to spokes man John Bender. Citizens from the Rio Grande Val ley to El Paso are complaining about a shortage of Spanish-language forms, Bentsen said. Texans trying to call toll-free numbers repeatedly encounter busy signals and some say Census workers have been unwilling or unable to assist them. “So far, the response from the Census Bureau has been to explain “I I must deplore the way the census is being administered in Texas. This is particularly true in El Paso, San Antonio, Corpus Christi and South Texas. In these areas, complaints and problems abound which, if not cured immediately, threaten the integrity of the census in Texas.” — Lloyd Bentsen, U.S.senator and excuse the problems that have arisen,” Bentsen told Bryant. “We don’t need explanations and ex cuses; we need quick, strong steps to cure these problems and ensure the completeness of the count in Texas.” Under the 1990 Census, Texas stands to add three seats to its 27- member House delegation in Con gress. An accurate count could possi bly bring the delegation’s total to 31, however, Bender said. ‘Bang Man’ could set Texas record DALLAS (AP) — The “Bant Man” bandit — so-called because he fires a shot into the ceilings of banks he robs — is on hiswayio breaking a bank robbery record in Texas. The FBI is blaming the Baoj Man for 12 bank robberies in tie Dallas area and 24 in all in Texas and California in a streak that be gan in July 1986. His take is more than$300,W in the two dozen holdups, said Dallas FBI spokesman Wood 1 Specht. The robber earned his nick name for his habit of firingask into the bank ceiling during bis robberies. T he Bang Man also has struck once each in Lubbou and Austin and 10 times in tbf Los Angeles and San Diego areas authorities say. No one has been hurt in tbt robberies, but police are worried that that might change. His use of a gun “can set into; motion a chain of events where: good Samaritan or vigilante-type person might get hurt trying B do something about it,” Sped! said. “He’s a rather strange fellow,' said M.K. Ratcliffe of the Nod Texas Regional Clearing House which has offered a $7,500 re ward for information leading® the robber’s indictment. “In one robbery he word morning coat and stovepipe hi! and beard,” which briefly earned him the nickname “Abe Lincoln Robber,” Ratcliffe said. AGGIE BAR ASSOCIATION LAW SCHOOL SCHOLARSHIPS DISCRIPTION: Stipend of $500. To be used first year attending • Awarded on competitive basis; Reviewing grades, test scores, interest in legal education and character • Personal interview is required. TIMETABLE: Application must be submitted by April 13, 1990« Awards an nounced early May For further information and application forms, please contact Dr. Hillary Jessup, Room 330 Blocker or Mr. Scott Shafer, 101 Academic Building. V! SI Re: WAS abortio not thi cause tl a new si Thoi or guilt tific stu wanted pose a said the nal Scie Olivi Abortic data fre “Whc them ai dusion The Americ Sin ex{ for KO dents White’ whom ager < presse he’d v one fo "I I able tc Brian diana pus. “ little rr Wh condit Childr he ha March respir; by his Sing seconc playin spoke’ said. “He Van L talks ti chang- Ats< comm a bill i AIDS "Th Sen. Mass., sation nie, al Resou the C source which would millioi combi denev Wh B. Kl< cause “He said. ‘ the fi reache who l: fore h stabili Wh tem. and h mem dent!] D NEV Shirley if this disease irnmun lives. “I W: she say at nigf fear. W The r °y Jr. conibir ease, b bubble who sc plastic i Only atound live in t live in t s °n hoi But ment tl jng enz infectic the yea. ful mer The marked They r-« sjons an times w. each hd The^ more tt