Students: Why Join an EXPENSIVE Health Club When YouVe Already PAID for facilities ON CAMPUS? We Offer: ✓Over 80 Intramural Sports & Activities' ✓29 Pifferent Sport Clubs* ✓An Adventurous Outdoors Program* ✓Step & Aerobic Classes' ✓basketball Courts ✓Racquetball & Handball Courts ✓Swimming Pools* ✓Tennis Courts ✓Weight Rooms* ✓Maps of Jogging & Walking Trails ✓Officiating Jobs Available (training included) * Additional fees may be assessed for some activities. Join Us at REC PEST and Piscover What We're All About! Thursday. September 3 9:00 am - 3:00 pm behind the Academic bldg. Free Recreational Sports calendars, neon pens and more will be Given away! This event is co-sponsored by Food Services. The University Police Department will be regis tering bicycles free of charge. WHAT A DEAL! Engineering Career The Student Engineers' Council Presents f I Capitalizing on ineenng Opportunities II Second Floor MSC Wednesday and Thursday, Sept 9 and 10 9a.m.-4p.m Four-Man Scramble Golf Tournament at Bryan Municipal Golf Course Tuesday, Sept.8 (sign up by Friday, Sept.4) Meet Prospective Employers at the Free Fajita Fest Tuesday, Sept 8,6-9p.m. in The Brazos Center Semi-Formal Banquet in Duncan Dining Hall By recruiter invitation only, Wednesday, Sept. 9, 6-8p.m. 63C For more information, call the SEC office at 847-8567, or see our booth in the Zachry Lobby. Page 14 The Battalion Wednesday, September2,W Crystal fiber research gets boost THE ASSOCIATED PRESS AUSTIN — The MCC high-tech research consor tium is moving ahead with a demonstration project that uses lasers to store vast amounts of computer in formation inside tiny crystal fibers. The Austin-based research center has received an advanced, compact laser that will be a key compo nent of its high performance holographic storage de- If the project goes as planned, MCC will demon strate a commercially feasible method of storing and retrieving computer information that is thousands of times faster than the magnetic disk drives typically used today. The new laser was built to Microelectronics and Computer Technology Corp. specifications by Amo co Laser Co. of Naperville, Ill. It is expected to enable researchers to store ii mation in the form of holographic images inside tim crystal fibers. MCC has been involved in researchd holographic storage since 1986. "Holostore" technology has been investigated^ others, but success has been elusive due inpartti the immature status of enabling technologies, includ ing lasers, spatial light modulators and detectorai rays. "We're moving out of the long-shot researd mode," Stephen Redfield, director of MCC's optic in computing programs, told the Austin American- Statesman. "We're transitioning from research to de velopment right now." MCC has been awarded patents fortwokei breakthroughs in the underlying technology and also built an experimental prototype, which demonstrat ed that its technology works. MCC now plans It build an advanced prototype. In-line skaters / out of line' THE ASSOCIATED PRESS COLLEGE STATION - Author ities have decided twin brothers were out of line when they cruised a mall on in-line skates — naked. The 24-year-old men were arrest ed at 1:25 a.m. Monday after they rode the smooth pavement of the spacious, empty — but well-lighted — Post Oak Mall parking lot and were spotted by a mall security guard. Lt. Wayne Onstott said Mark and Michael Sammis were charged with disorderly conduct by public indecency, a Class C misdemeanor. police a reason for their late-night excursion. When contacted Monday by the Bryan-College Station Eagle, Michael Sammis would say only that the nude adventure was a first for the men. Authorities described the inci dent as bizarre. "Back in the early 1970s there were streakers, but not on Rollerblades or roller skates," On stott said. A Post Oak security guard, who asked not to be identified, said the Sammis' nocturnal visit to the nor mally quiet mall was "most unusu al." They paid a $130 fine late Mon day morning and were released from the College Station city jail. The brothers, who live across the street from the mall, did not give "It's downright boring most of the time," he said. "We've never had anything quite like this. Must have been something in the August Dallas' $30 bail results in suit THE ASSOCIATED PRESS money the county has collected the over tne years. DALLAS — Four men have filed a class-action lawsuit accus ing Dallas County of illegally charging inmates a $30 fee when they post bail to get out of jail. The lawsuit filed Thursday comes almost four months after the Texas Supreme Court ruled that the same kind of fee was ille gal in El Paso County. Dallas County Sheriff Jim Bowles, whose office collected the fee for the county, is also named in the suit, which seeks past dam ages amounting to four times the If the case receives class action status, "tens of thousands" of de fendants in criminal cases who paid the $30 paid fee since it be gan nearly 10 years ago could be brought into the suit, said the plaintiffs' attorney Arch McColl. Assistant District Attorney Tom Keever said he was not sur prised to hear about the lawsuit, which he said he had not seen. He said the county stopped collecting the $30 fee shortly after the Supreme Court's ruling. Jury decides on 1981 gas explosion THE ASSOCIATED PRESS •AMARILLO - After more than a decade of litigation, a jun Tuesday found Apache Corp. negligent in what has been called the biggest gas well blowout in Texas history. The 1981 well blowout oc curred near Allison in Wheeler County. A Potter County jury as sessed $4.5 million in punitive damages against Apache, with $500,000 of that amount for attor ney fees, the Amarillo Globe re ported. The eight plaintiffs were royal ty owners in nearby land.The group had sued, saying they in curred large gas losses as a result of the blowout. The Texas road Commission said the gas well blowout was the biggest in Texas history. The commission also said the well was probably the largest gas well ever drilled in the state. Apache's chairman and chief executive officer at the time said no personal injury, explosion or accidental fire occurred at the site during the 16 months of around- the-clock control work after the blowout. The punitive damages'are to he divided among eight plaintiffs, More than $300,000 in compen satory damages was awarded to plaintiffs, court officials said. WORK SMARTER. NOT HARDER. M anagement or marketing major? Smart. 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