SCUBA BELIZE Ambergris Caye - Depart March 10 / Return March 14 $688.00 Includes: Roundtrip air from Houston to Belize City Roundtrip air from Belize City to San Pedro (Ambergris Caye) 4 Nights hotel accommodations 3 Days of Diving - 2 tanks per day Note: Hotel tax and service charges not included. Docs not include departure tax, airport tax, or security taxes. Call for our Spring Break Prices for 7 Day Cruises! All Rates are Subject to Availability and Change. ADVENTURE TRAVEL 260-1311 /<*** . hS » v' Page 4 The Battalion Friday February 8, House honors Spade Phillips, P.l. Marine killed in gulf war by Matt Kowalsl X Dow 'r bwbw if T CAN THK it MocH longer H£kf in SflODi AKflBlU wrm ftLL THIS RELtGoo' TOTWL ITAPiAWISK. ^ A 0 % / b / . PROFESSIONAL TESTING CENTERS o° N GMAT review The Difference Between Admission To The MBA Program of Your Choice... And Not Being Admitted At All! □ Enclosed is $45. Enroll me at the TAMU student early en rollment discount tuition of $295 (Reg. tuition is $495) □ I would like more information about your course. Name: Address: City/St./Zip l. Phone: plan to take the GMAT Exam on. -19_ 1-800-274-3926 Mail to: A subsidiary of Harcourt Brace Jovanovich. bar/bri GMAT Review Also offing Conviser-Duffy-Miller CPA 1415 Fannin, Suite 250 Review, LSAT MCAT & SAT Houston, TX 77002 AUSTIN (AP) — The Texas House unanimously approved a res olution honoring Lance Cpl. Arthur Garza, a Kingsville native who was the first Marine from the state to die in the Persian Gulf war, and stood to applaud his family. Garza, who died in an accident last month, enlisted in the Marine Corps at age 17, after he graduated from high school. He “has returned home to Kings ville, Texas, a hero at the age of 20,” said the resolution by Rep. Irma Rangel, D-Kingsville, approved Thursday by the House. The Senate approved a similar resolution Wednesday. Garza’s family was introduced to the House, including his wife, Jen nifer Garza; parents, Mary Helen Garza and Oscar Garza; sister, Mari- cella Garza; and brother, Jose Domi ngo Garza. The House resolution also ex tended sympathy to Garza’s grand mother, Lilia Luna, and his baby daughter, Sasha Nicole. U.S. Customs Service probes into Iraqi contract WESKWDSPEC/MS/ Safe ends Saturday, Feb. 9 Seagram’s 7 Crown $6" .750 ml 80 proof Skol Vodka $7" 1.75 It. 80 proof mr LIGHT BEER Suitcases $7 99 GOOD 2402 Texas Ave> TIMESS^'H Kroger Shopping Center) * i/*m iCollege Station UUyUK 693-5428 __ HOUSTON (AP) — A Houston businessman had a 1981 contract to provide Iraq with engineering de sign and other services for military sites that now are targeted by U.S. forces, according to a Customs Serv ice probe. The U.S. Customs Service in Houston paid for information, in cluding the contract, that may have contributed to allied forces’ ability to locate Iraqi military sites, the Hous ton Chronicle and KPRC-TV re ported. In a copyright story Thursday, the Chronicle said the contract, worth $552 million, allegedly was taken from the London offices of the late Ihsan Barbouti, an Iraqi ex patriate whose family has business ties to Houston. The 1981 contract called for a Barbouti company to provide Iraq with engineering design, material supply and other services for the construction of hardened aircraft shelters, fuel storage, airfield light ing, ammunition storage and other military systems. A Houston attorney, speaking on behalf of Barbouti interests in the United States, denied that Barbouti, who died last July at 63, was involved in Iraq’s military buildup. “The allegations concerning the Iraqi installations are absolutely, un equivocally — and I say this without equivocation — are false,” said Bill Rosch. The contract and other informa tion were turned over to a U.S. Cus toms special agent at a London hotel on Sept. 1, a month after Iraq in vaded Kuwait, according to a Cus toms Service document obtained by the Chronicle and an attorney who was present. The contract lists 16 locations in Iraq where construction supposedly would take place. » The informant was paid $2,700, the Customs document shows, as part of an ongoing investigation of Barbouti activities in the United States. 0. K. curs, TH£nckd /j aslccp. Lets go fop. m right inn Eft nostril and the left barcankl Civil rights groups seek adjustment of census AUSTIN (AP) — Hispanic and civil rights groups filed lawsuits Thursday seeking to ban use of 1990 census figures that aren’t adjusted for minority undercounts, a move that could de lay legislative redistricting. The two lawsuits are aimed at forcing the U.S. Commerce Department and the state to add hun dreds of thousands of people believed over looked by the census to the data the state uses to redraw legislative boundaries. “We feel that this time around, we have the population in this state to ensure that Hispanics and Blacks get more representation,” Rep. Ro man Martinez, D-Houston, a member of the House Redistricting Committee, said. “Not only for Hispanics and Blacks and the homeless but also for rural Texans and all Tex ans alike, there needs to be an adjustment; and it needs to be done now,” Martinez said. The Texas Civil Rights Project and Mexican- American Legal Defense and Education Fund filed the lawsuits, seeking an injunction against the release or use of unadjusted census informa tion. Preliminary census figures have been released, but U.S. Commerce Secretary Robert Mosbacher will not decide whether to adjust the officialdacl untiljuly 15. Thursday’s lawsuits were filed in state distrv ! court in Hidalgo County and federal distnij court in Brownsville. The class actions also* as plaintiffs several Hispanic citizens and tail paying residents who were not counted duriti the census. O The suit contends the counties most affectc by the short count are Cameron, Hidalgo, V;j Verde, Maverick, El Paso, Harris, Bexar and Di las. DALLAS (AP) — A gay activist group has criticized proposed legis lation that would allow emergency workers who suspect they’ve been bitten by someone carrying the AIDS virus to demand the person be tested for the deadly infection. “There has been no case of any body ever getting AIDS through a bite,” said Bruce Monroe, president of the Dallas Gay Alliance. “This is a way for them to intim idate gay people and dehumanize Workers demand new AIDS-testing bill WA< Bush a live pi; the nat partly 1 them when they deal with them in any arrest situation.” virus, said John Young, Ovard’slf islative aide. The bill is scheduled for a hearing Monday before the House Commit tee on Public Health. Rep. A.R. Ovard, R-Dallas, introduced the leg islation at the request of the Dallas County Sheriffs Department. The bill would cover tests for sev eral infections but is mainly aimed at finding human immuno-deficiency Under the bill’s guidelines, any police officer, fr| fighter, emergency medical sem employee or correctional offc could ask his agency to order a pf son to undergo HIV testing if it person has bitten them, and if IM have reason to believe the pent could be infected with HIV, the«l rus that causes acquired immunedt ficiency syndrome. \AGCIEVli S /^tlNEMA/ \aGGII NEMa/ PRESUMED INNOCENT Fri./Sat., Feb. 8/9 7:30/9:45PM Rudder Theatre $2.00 LETHAL WEAPON mv* Fri./Sat v Feb. 8/9 Midnight Rudder Theatre $2.00 Tickets are now available at the MSC Box Office. Aggie Cinema Information Hotline ^847-8478® The next Aggie Cinema General Meeting will be held in Rudder 225 on 2/11 at 7:00PM. Magistrate frees two reporters pending appeal vironmi HOUSTON (AP) — A fedefl magistrate Thursday freed withr bail two newspaper reporters citt for contempt of court after they it fused to help a defense lawyer idei tify murder witnesses. U.S. Magistrate Nancy PechtK cy 1 leased James T. Campbell of Houston Chronicle and Felix Sat chez of the Houston Post on the own recognizance at least until hearing scheduled next Monday e their appeal. Earlier Thursday, State Distn Judge William Harmon had set tenced the reporters each to 30 da 1 in jail and fined them $500 afie they refused for a third time to cot ply with his order. The reporters had faced up tot months in jail for refusing Harmot order to help defense attorney k vin Oncken identify the witnesses Pecht also delayed a hearing the reporters’ appeal of the fit tempt citation to give lawyers for tt ! Harris County Sheriffs Depa r ment, which issued the subpoet time to prepare their case. Thehea ing was postponed until Month morning. ex 1 t hea t $5.9' ®si Peng