il A AM/PM Clinics p CLINICS Minor Emergencies General Medical Care • Weight Reduction Program 10% Student Discount with I.D. Card (Except for Weight Program) 846-4756 693-0202 779-4756 401 S. Texas (29th & Texas) 3820 Texas (next to Randy Sims) 2305 Texas Ave S. (next to U Rent M) College Station Ion:, ^ it; ^ Sts samf TEXAS HALL OF FAME Your #1 Live Country Night Spot! Fri. night-Free Bar Drinks & Draft Beer 8-11 p.m. Special FX - Live Sat. night-Any Single Shot Bar Drink g ^ oo Longnecks, Margaritas ^ " Mundo Earwood - Live May 9 - Mark Collie with Full House Senior, College & Faculty I.D. Discount 822-2222 2309 FM 2818 South OOE Congratulations! To The New Officers Of MSC Political Forum "Tfr .gSChair International |National jState jlnsight ^Special Events Publicity issociate Publicity }.L. Miller Director 'inance Ronald Heath Erin Bertin Stephanie Schull Anne Edwards Joe Trimble Stace Vanderstek Kara Coppoletta Jennifer Hjulian Tracy Stoll Shane Jenson SALE SALE SALE SALE SALE SALE SALE SALE SALE SALE SALE SALE SALE Contact Lenses Only Quality Name Brands (Bausch & Lomb, Ciba, Barnes-Hinds-Hydrocurve) $118 00 TOTAL COST - Includes eye exam, > free care kit, and std. daily wear soft ™ lenses. £ $138 OR OO Irinkil “bad: w TOTAL COST - Includes eye exam, free care kit, and std. extended wear or tinted soft lenses. ALSO AVAILABLE: Bifocal Soft and Astigmatic Soft Lenses SAME DAY DELIVERY ON MOST LENSES Sale ends June 1,1990 Call 696-3754 For Appointment ^ CHARLES C. SCHROEPPEL, O.D., P.C. DOCTOR OF OPTOMETRY 707 South Texas Ave., Suite 101D ^ •55S College Station, Texas 77840 ™ 1 block South of Texas & University Dr. intersection r~ College Station, Texas 77840 m ME SALE SALE SALE SALE SALE SALE SALE SALE SALE SALE SALE SALE SALE nan'll ags> tion i iecou| ter d hit-| tthi I, im ■hop: ndi lid. ity I'lJ eer r re al ( f here | ho< Play It Smart This Summer at Houston Community College [• We offer academic courses that transfer back to your college or university |* Our 37 campuses in the greater Houston area bring our courses right to your doorstep |* If you have a busy summer planned, you can choose from day or evening classes that will fit right into your schedule Registration for Summer Semester I Begins May 22 of CO] 5 pc’ nth!' iks bars jet a'" 5 r’s y for ipp 1 ! Joe .dvo« Things to Bring With ;You to Registration: TASP scores or a transcript showing TASP exemption 1 Transcript — Official or unofficial. Grade reports will be accepted for Spring grades. lie Classes begin June 4 For information, call 868-0742 Houston Community College System Houston Community College System does not discriminate on the basis of race, color, religion, national origin, sex, age, or handicap. &M’s video yearbook, is option 23! Friday, May 4,1990 The Battalion Page 5 In Advance Dinner honors African-American students Festivities honoring African- American former students of Texas A&M will begin at 5:30 p.m. Satur day with a reception at the Clayton Williams Alumni Center. The reception will be followed by a dinner and program at 7 p.m. at the MSC. The reception and dinner are sponsored by University President William Mobley, the Association of Former Students and the President’s Former Students Advisory Commit tee on Black Issues. The program’s speakers include President Mobley, Chairman of the Texas A&M Board of Regents Wil liam McKenzie, President of the Texas A&M Alumni Association An drew Hansen, and Robert Bisor and Sam Williams, co-chairmen of the President’s Former Students Advi sory Committtee on Black Issues. Boot Dance to be held May 12 in Rudder As the zips of ’90 pack up their trunks and move out into the real world, the Class of ’91 will be show ing off their new boots at Boot Dance. On Saturday, May 12, the new se niors will finally get the chance to wear the boots they have spent the last three years working for. The dance will take place in Rud der Exhibit Hall from 9 p.m. until midnight. A variety of music including rock, country, rap and New Wave will be provided to fit all tastes. Picture packages will be available at the dance for $9 and $12. Each package will include an 8-by-10 pic ture of the Corps of Cadets member as well as a picture of the couple. Although Boot Dance has tradi tionally been viewed as a Corps of Cadets function, it is open to every junior at the University. Tickets are on sale for $18 at the Rudder Box Office and include a champagne glass and a Boot Dance ’90 key chain. What’s Up Friday A&M HILLEL: will have dinner at 7 p.m. and shabbat services at 8 p.m. at the Hillel Jewish Center. GOLDEN MEMORIES DANCE: will have music of the 1930s, ’40s and ’50s at 8 p.m. at A&M Consolidated High School. STUDENTS OVER TRADITIONAL AGE: will have supper club at 6 p.m. at Swensen’s. Call Nancy at 845-1741 for more information. Sunday BRAZOS VALLEY ALZHEIMER'S DISEASE FAMILY SUPPORT GROUP: will have a guest speaker at 3 p.m. in 160 Medical Science Bldg.-West Cam pus. Call Pat at 693-1680 for more information. COMMODORE AMIGA CLUB: will have a meeting at the Langford Architecture Center in 300AB at 2 p.m. Call 847-2365 for more information. Items for What’s Up should be submitted to The Battalion, 216 Reed McDonald, no later than three business days before the desired run date. We only publish the name and phone number of the contact if you ask us to do so. What's Up is a Battalion service that lists non-profit events and activities. Submissions are run on a first-come, first-served basis. There is no guarantee an entry will run. If you have questions, call the newsroom at 845-3315. Soviet youths tour America, make film FREEPORT (AP) — Sixteen young Soviet film enthusiasts filed into the video production depart ment of the Dow Chemical Co. speaking broken but friendly “hel los” to editors who would soon help them add the final touches to a video they recently filmed in America. The students, ranging in age from 9 to 17, from Tbilisi, Georgia, spent two weeks in America recendy as part of a Galveston area-Soviet youth media exchange program called Kids Make Movies. Toward the end of their educatio nal journey, which included a trip to NASA, the University of Houston- Clear Lake and Galveston, the stu dents visited Dow to work with edi tors and video production special ists. They will take the film back home to show friends, family and a local television station the American cul ture they absorbed. Roy Schneider, a video produc tion specialist who contracts with Dow, worked extensively through out the day with the students. “It was amazing to me to see that children are children no matter where they are from,” Schneider said after the visit. “Their thoughts, their ambitions, what they did, what they talked about were the same as American children at the same age.” Schneider said the students seemed to be very ambitious in their endeavors. “They didn’t want to break for lunch because they were working — American kids are the opposite,” he said. Schneider said he let the Soviet students prepare the first few min utes of the film completely on their own. “We let them make decisions and I would press the buttons,” he said. “I would lead them a little ... because most children and people new to production want to use all the toys. “I would try to lead them in the area of sometimes less is more,” he said. Schneider said the Soviet students belong to an after-school filmmak ing class where they work with crude, simple materials in film, and most of them had never seen or worked with video tapes. “They were amazed at electronics and the speed of editing videos,” he said. The students caught on quickly, and during their two-week trip they created a five-minute program with a musical introduction, followed by interviews with workers from NAS A and the Soviet students’ reactions to the space center. Natia Tsiskarishvili, 14, mostly be came entranced by a graphics dem onstration given on a Macintosh computer while the other students worked editing the film. She watched her name spelled out and spun around on the terminal’s screen. Tsiskarishvili, who speaks En glish, said she most enjoyed visiting NASA and the university and will tell her friends about her “very nice” host family. Sergo Buiglishvili, 15, also speaks English and is a student who re cently produced and directed an award-winning film. The film, “The Last Bell” is based on the death of a classmate during a political demon stration in Soviet Georgia. It was re cently honored at the Odessa Film Festival as a top student film. Buiglishvili said he was very im pressed with the seriousness of meetings by organizations in Amer ica. “It is very official, these meeting with people who do such important and good things,” he said. He said all the students were amazed that they were able to be in side of the space center, talk to astro naut Story Musgrave, and shoot the movie. “Our mission is to make joint films,” he said. “It’s very interesting to work together. The Georgian kids are learning from American kids and American kids are learning from Georgian kids how to work to gether.” Kim Crabbs, an American visual artist, founded Kids Make Movies in 1988 after she recognized a need for kids to have a vehicle to express their ideas. “The last six years I have worked with kids giving them an opportu nity to control images themselves,” she said. Roommates Driving You Crazy? • Study Rooms E-Z TRAVEL Texas at Holleman 693-5822 Coupon must be presented at check-in. plus tax per night with coupon & student I.D. expires 05-09-90 SUMMER STORAGE Offering “Aggie Share A-Space” For the 4th Year *Total rent for the summer beginning at $45°° ★No security deposit with A&M I.D. ★Several size units available ★Reserve now (Advanced payment required) ★3.00 off w/this Ad Call 779-SAFE for details (779-7233) Security Plus Storage 2306 S. College Bryan Shop for Your Mother where mothers love to shop Cards • Gifts* Candies Bryan’s Exclusive James Avery Jewelry Dealer Mothers Day, May 13 4001 E. 29th, Suite 108 Carter Creek Center, Bryan 10-6p.m. M-Sat. 268-3261 MCATSTUDENTS The September 15,1990 MCAT is your last chance to take the “old” format. Stanley H. Kaplan is offering our MCAT PREP PLUS course during each summer session. GET A JUMP ON THE COMPETITION • Classes Forming Now. Sign up by May 14, 1990, and get $25 off tuition and a free gift. Call 696-3196 for more information. g STANLEY H. KAPLAN Take Kaplan Or Take Your Chances AGGIE SPECIAL 12" medium original style pizza with 1 item hil $5.49 Expires 5/31/90 Tax not included in price. One coupon per pizza. ® Limited delivery areas ensure safe driving. T I I I I I 1 I B I I I I I J 260-9020 4407 S. Texas 693-2335 1504 Holleman 822-7373 Townshire Shopping Center IT'S TIME FOR DOMINO'S PIZZAT CASH FOR SCRAP GOLD, GOLD COINS Diamonds, Rare Coins Rolex and Piaget Watches Contact John D. Huntley Personally Located at Texas Coin Exchange 404 University Dr. E. 846-8916