RAPE! ROBBERY! ASSAULT! Don’t be a victim. Fight back with Curb Teargas Protector. Order Today! Your life could depend on it! Pocket/ purse size. $10.& $2. s/h. Ascent, P.O.Box 4301, Bryan, Tx 77805 $ 3 80 BARGAIN MATINEE ALL SHOWS BEFORE 6 P.M. AH afternoon 9mm lor Soturdey A Sunday only MANOR EAST III | MANOR EAST MAUL »gM3QO ERNEST GOES TO JAIL QLORT * : : MK 2:10 4M PQ 700 9JX MS 420 ft 708 *»40 PLAZA THREE ! 224 SOUTHWEST PKWV W NT FOR •02-2457 RED OCTOBER ‘ I LOVE YOU TO DEATH * DRIV1NQ USS DAISY* 3300 420 PQ 700 4 >45 4SM n Too 2:10 4^0 PQ 7:10 9:30 SCHULMAN SIX I 2000 E. 20TH STREET 775-2403 NUNS ON THE RUN ms-iiM R 700 ousa $1 DOLLAR MOVIES $1 THE UTTLE MERMAID TAMOOSCA8H 2 05 4*0 Q 705 025 ; .,*no 4ao. NIOHT»ftfitt»'::: :: ^ : 5aa ' fM Tilt *3*4 STEEL S:id 42S MAQNOUAS* PO-13 7:10 0*0 STUDENT/YOUTH TOURS *One-Week Leningrad & Moscow, land only. **other U.S.S.R.and Eastern Europe tours available. CouncilThmd 3300 W. Mockingbird Ln. Dallas, Texas 75235 (214) 350-6166 1-800-777-2874 $100 $100 $100 $100 $100 $100 $100 $100 $100 $100 $100 $100 $100 $100 $100 $100 Insomnia Individuals (21-55 years old) who occasionally have trou- ^ 10 o ble sleeping due to short term stress to participate in a 1 $100 week insomnia research study. $100 incentive for those $100 chosen to participate. $1QO $100 $100 $100 $100 $100 $100 $100 $100 $J00 $100 $75 $75 $75 $75 $75 $75 $75 $75 $75 $75 $75 $75 I?! NEW COLD STUDY $75 Individuals who have recently developed a cold to participate in a $75 short research study with a currently available prescription medica ls tion. $75 incentive for those chosen to participate. $75 $75 $75 $75 $75 $75 $75 $75 $75 $75 $75 $75 $75 $75 $75 $75 $75 $75 $75 $100 $100 $100 $100 $100 $100 $100 $100 $100 $100 $100 $100 $100 ADULT SORE THROAT STUDY $100 $100 Individuals 18 years & older with severe sore throat pain to $ 1 00 $100 participate in a investigational research drug study. $100 $100 $100 incentive for those chosen to participate. $100 $100 $100 $100 $100 $100 $100 $100 $100 $100 $100 $100 $100 $100 $100 $100 $100 $100 $100 $100 $100 $100 $100 $100 $100 $100 $100 $100 $100 $100 $100 $100 IRRITABLE BOWEL SYNDROME STUDY $100 Symptomatic patients with recent physician diagnosed, ir- $100 ritable bowel syndrome to participate in a short research study. $100 incentive for those chosen to participate. $100 $100 $100 $100 $100 $100 $100 $100 $100 $100 $100 $100 $100 $100 $100 $400 $400 $400 $400 $400 $400 $400 $400 $400 $400 HIGH BLOOD PRESSURE STUDY $400 Individuals with high blood pressure, either on or off blood pressure $400 *6400 medication daily to participate in a high blood pressure study. $300 $400 incentive. BONUS: $100 additional incentive for enrolling and com- pieting study. $400 $400 $400 $400 $400 $400 $400 $400 $400 $400 $400 $400 $400 $100 $100 $100 $100 $100 $100 $100 $100 $100 $100 $100 $100 $100 $100 $100 $100 vlOO $100 $100 PAINFUL MUSCULAR INJURIES $ioo Individual with recent lower back or neck pain, sprain, $100 strains, muscle spasms, or painful muscular sport injury to $100 participate in a one week research study. $100 incentive for $100 those chosen to participate. $100 $100 $100 $100 $100 $100 $100 $100 $100 $100 $100 $100 CALL PAULL RESEARCH INTERNATIONAL 776-0400 AggieVision 23 mm i WANTED: Staff Members for the 1991 Aggieland (yearbook) Positions available for experienced photographers, writers, and layout designers. Applications may be picked up in room 230 Reed McDonald and are due by 4 p.m. on Friday, April 20. L i-; i'l'. if 1 FTT l/i 1 ij: I i m m#* rr lmups Betcha can’t eat ..S'i just 10! & vvr- -A •tjr |b - >’ (actual size) • . >.±’ All the Pried Shrimp you can eat plus a Steak for just $8.95. Get all the big, crunchy, golden fried shrimp you can eat, plus a USDA Choice Steak and rice all for just $8.95. Or, if you are a crab lover, indulge yourself with 1 pound of Alaskan Snow Crab legs for just $10.95. We made a special buy of the first catch of the year, so our crab legs are extra sweet and tender. Whichever dinner you choose we bet you’ll love it and be back for more. 607 TEXAS AVE., COLLEGE STATION Also in: Austin • El Paso • Houston 1| BOM BAY 1) BiaciKLiJi) RESTAURANT & BAR A BIT WII-D. A BIT CIVIIJZLD. AMD (JUTE A BIT OF FI \! ill Page 4 The Battalion Friday, April 20, Secret Service arrrests man for threats to kill Bush LUBBOCK (AP) — The son of a former Panamanian president said Thursday that he was joking when he told a pawnbroker he had “a bul let with Bush’s name engraved on it.” “I was not serious,” Otto Lakas said. “Not at all, not at all. I didn’t do anything. I am very confused. All I know is that I am in jail.” Lakas, a 21-year-old student at Lubbock Christian University, was being held Thursday in Lubbock County jail on a federal charge of threatening to kill the president. He was arrested Tuesday after a Secret Service investigation. According to court documents from the Secret Service, Lakas, while trying to buy a .357 Colt revolver at the Exect Pawn Shop, told clerk Stacy Nichols, “I have a .223-caliber rifle at home and a bullet with Bush’s name engraved on it. “Bush is coming to Lubbock and I will blow his ... head off.” The White House has announced no plans for a Bush visit to Lubbock, although Bush is scheduled to visit Dallas, Houston and Austin in May. Parents (Continued from page 1) Akron, Ohio, went to college near their mutual hometown. Mr. Brun ner, who attended Mount St. Mary’s University in Ohio, and Mrs. Brun ner, who attended the University of Akron, said they moved to Houston in 1969 for Mr. Brunner’s job with RCA. But their three children’s devo tion to A&M was only part of the reason they became so attached to the University. Mr. and Mrs. Brunner said they have spent many hours on visits to universities throughout the country, and they say A&M is still one of the best they’ve seen. “We really have a good feel for what a good university is,” he said. “And we knew we had a good uni versity right here.” “We fell in love with this Univer sity and the type of students who came here,” Mrs. Brunner said. The couple, who are Century Club members, also have donated 12th Man Endowed Scholarships in the names of their children even though they still were enrolled. The Brunners, who aren’t shy about traveling to sporting events, travel from Houston frequently to watch Aggie baseball games and they have only missed a handful of foot ball games, home or away, in several years. When the couple isn’t attending A&M events, they are house shop ping — house shopping in College Station, that is. “We’re thinking of moving up he re,” Mr. Brunner said. “We’ve been looking at lots and housing for a couple of months now. We just have to do it a little at a time.” But the Brunners may have even bigger plans in the works —the ad mittance of Mr. Brunner into A&M. He is currently in the process of gathering his college credits from Mount St. Mary’s and the University of Houston in order to get admitted into his favorite school. “I have to try and get my Aggie ring,” he said. Muster 1990 scheduled for Saturday night Texas A&M’s Muster 1990 will be at 7 Saturday night in G. Rollie White Coliseum. The ceremony will last until 8:30. A candle-lighting ceremony will honor students and former students who have died during the past year. A candle will be lit for each Ag gie who died in Brazos County last year, and someone will an swer ‘here’ to symbolize the per son is still alive in spirit. Red Cashion, Class of ’53 and chairman of the board of AN CO Insurance in Bryan, will speak at the ceremony. Cashion is also an NFL referee and had a Camp named after him last mer. The Singing Cadets will per. form for the first time at Muster and the Century Singers also nil perform. A camaraderie barbecue al* will be on April 21 at ll:30a.a in the Academic Plaza, near statue of Lawerence Sullivan Ross. For anyone with a food service meal plan, the barbecue count as a meal. Otherwise, ets are $5 and can be purchased in the MSC and the Blodei Building. TEAC sponsors Sunday’s Earth Day Fair The Texas Environmental Ac tion Coalition will host an Earth Day Fair from 11 a.m. to 5 p.m. Sunday in the Research Park. More than 30 student and community organizations are the fair. participating in Everyone is invited tobringpa per, aluminum, glass, hardpfasiic and used clothes for recycling. The fair will include music, re freshments, informational booths, a play, a 5K run, exotic animals and games and activities Fridi Fraternity donates equipment to state school The Texas A&M chapter of Pi Kappa Phi fraternity will donate saddles and horse equipment va lued at approximately $1,000 to horses. Pi Kappa Phi will provide some equipment to help get tlie program implemented. $1,200 to the Brenham State School during the fraternity re chartering banquet Saturday at Rudder Tower. The equipment will aid the Brenham State School in a new physical therapy treatment that involves the use of horseback rid ing as an innovative means of the rapy for people with severe disa bilities. The fraternity’s philanthrope is called People Understanding the Severely Handicapped (PUSH). Pi Kappa Phi is the only organization in the United States that contributes to PUSH. The Brenham State School, which is the largest institution for the disabled in the area, has the Stepping Stones, a local com munity organization for wayward children, delegated the mones for the equipment to Pi Kappa Phi in order for the fraternity to donate the money to a worthy cause. The fraternity chose to help the physical therapy pro gram in Brehnam. Student Y Association to host Youth Fun Day The Student Y Association will host a Youth Fun Day at 12:30 p.m. Saturday at Kyle Field. Youth Fun Day V, “Keeping the Fun Alive,” is an opportunity for third-, fourth- and fifth-grad ers from Bryan and College Sta tion to participate in a mini Olympics, which will include relav races and obstacle courses. All participants will receive a prize, and the activities are free, Graduate council hosts annual Spring Fling The Texas A&M Graduate Student Council will have its an nual Spring Fling Sunday in Cen tral Park on Krenek Tap Road. All graduate students and their families are invited. Events tor tne day will include sporting activites at 1 p.m. and a final softball game at 2 p.m. Drinks and food will be pro vided by the Graduate Student Council. A playground is also available for children. Accounting group to hold awards ceremony The National Association of Black Accountants will have an awards ceremony at 7 Sunday night in 206 MSC. Those who attend should wear business attire. Registration still open for Real World 101 Graduating seniors who still want to attend “Real World 101: Life after Aggieland” April 26 from 7 to 10 p.m. can register at the office of Student Activities. The program is intended to make the transition from college to the work world easier. Subjects include how to formulate a job search strategy; manage personal finances; and how women can juggle career and family. For more information on regis tration, call Student Activities al 845-1133. Restaurant Report The restaurants listed below were inspected by the Brazos County Health Department between April 9 and Friday. Information is from a food service estab lishment inspection report. SCORED BETWEEN 95 AND 100: Confucius Chinese Cuisineat 2322 Texas Ave. S. Score — 97. Points were deducted for unsatisfactory thermometers and reusing single-service articles. The restaurant was inspected because of a com plaint. Farmers Market Bakery 8c Deli at 2700 Texas Ave. Score — 96. Points were deducted for inade quate hair restraints, unclean food-contact surfaces, unclean floors, walls and ceilings. It was a regularly scheduled inspection. Farmers Market Catering at 2700 Texas Ave. Score — 96. Points were deducted for unsatisfactory food protection during storage, inadequate shielding of light fixtures and improperly stored cleaning and maintenance equipment. It was a regularly sched uled inspection. Kaffe Klatsch at 108 N. Ave. Score — 95. Points were deducted for unsatisfactory food protection during storage, unclean non-food contact surfaces, inadequate self-closing doors in bathrooms and im proper waste receptacles. It was a regularly sched uled inspection. SCORED BETWEEN 90 AND 94: Texan Restaurant at 3204 S. College Ave. Score — 93. Points were deducted for improper food pro tection during service, inadequate maintenance of non-food contact surfaces, unclean non-food contacl surfaces, improper handling of clean equipment and utensils, unsatisfactory floor repair, unsatisfacton wall and ceiling repair and unclean walls and ceil ings. It was a regularly scheduled inspection. David Jefferson, a registered sanitarian at the de partment, said restaurants with scores of 95 or above generally have excellent operations and facilities. He said restaurants with scores in the 70s or low SOs usually have serious violations in the health report Scores can be misleading, Jefferson said, because restaurants can get the same score by having several minor violations or a few major violations. He said the minor violations can be corrected during the in spection. Point deductions or violations in the report range from one point (minor violations) to fire points (major violations). Jefferson said the department might close a res taurant if the score is below 60, the personnel hare infectious diseases, the restaurant lacks adequate re frigeration, there is a sewage backup in the building or the restaurant has a complete lack of sanitization for the food equipment. The department inspects each restaurant even six months. Jefferson said a follow-up inspection is sometimes required if a restaurant has a four- or five-point violation that cannot be corrected during the inspection, or if there are numerous small vioh- dons. 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