DEMI MOORE <01% md.^j w AHUSB A BILLIONAIRE. A PROPOSAL ai\i ADRIAN LYNEfilm INDECENT PROPOSAL PARAMOUNT PICTURES presents fl SHERRY 1ANSING production AN ADRIAN TYNE fiem ROBERT REDFORD DEMI MOORE WOODY HARRELSON INDECENT PROPOSAL OLIVER PLAH SEYMOUR CASSELcmKJOHN BARRY ««■ MICHAEL TADROSS nSTOM SCHULMAN and ALEX GARTNER .SSJACK ENGELHARD " W, !IAMY HOLDEN JONES 1 UNDm 11 DlOtlmtS AOCODPflNVmS Mill ii i mi null i {iimniiiMt SOUAIDIKACK ai IIIIM AVAIIAHII I IN MCA CEIMPACI DISCS AND CASSETTES “SHERRY LANSING "’“ITADRIAN LYNE _ A PARAMOUNT COMMUNICATIONS COMPANV IM Ii CIIPYRIliHI CiT) l!l!l:l HY I'AITAMOITNI I'HTIKITS All KITH IS III SI IIVI IT 0' STARTS WEDNESDAY APRIL 7 AT A THEATRE NEAR YOU HE THOUGHT IT WAS JUST A CRUSH. HE WAS DEAD WRONG. THE PRODUCTION JAMES G. ROBINSON PRESENTS A MORGAN CREEK ! “THE CRUSH” CARY ELWES ALICIA SILVERSTONE JENNIFER RUBIN KURTWOOD SMITH "“GRAEME REVELL EDITOR IAN CRAFFORD phoSphyBRUCE SURTEES S™ MICHAEL BOLTON PRODUCER GARY BARBER mm £— HCStm'cTKP ' igBi UNOEA IT REQUIRES »CC0*P»»»l«0 PARENT OR ADULT GUARDIAN PRODUCED BY JAMES G. ROBINSON "“.’ALAN SHAPIRO Da ! DOLBY STEREO NSELECTED THEATRES © 1993 Morgon Crwk Producliom, Inc. OPENS APRIL Page 4 The Battalion Thursday, April 1,1993 Klan Rally Continued from Page 1 Under the cartoon, the release said, "You've heard Ron Wilson talk about how bad Whites are at Texas A&M. Now hear what we have to say." Wilson told The Battalion Wednesday that the KKK needs to increase their supporters, and this is just another attempt to do it. "They obviously need something to bolster their sagging image," he said Lowe said cultural pro grams, such as multicultural week, exclude whites and are therefore discriminatory. Stu dents should hear the organi zation's message before they decide whether to attend, he said. "We are not a violent orga nization," Lowe said. "We are simply a white's civil rights group. I think people who attend will be pleased. "Once the minority becomes the majority, we are going to be victims," Lowe said. "And they will not be as good to us as we have been to them." Wilson said he in no way agrees with the message of the KKK but added that anyone has the right to protest. "It's a free country," he said. "We have to allow "Once the minority be comes the majority, we are going to be victims. .. and they will not be as good to us as we have been to them." individuals to express their opinion, no matter how sordid it is. "But obviously I don't condone their cause." Wilson said he would invite the KKK to Houston to have a rally. "I'd invite them to come down to the Fifth Ward or the inner city in Houston to have their rally," he said. College Station Mayor Larry Ringer said the po lice department will do all they can do to insure the rally is peaceful. "We can't deny them the opportunity to hold "The price we pay for democra- _ cy is that everyone gets free dom of speech." Ringer said the best reac tion for citizens is to ignore the rally. " Most people are like I am and don't agree with the philosophies of the KKK," he said. "The best thing we can do is go about our daily busi ness regardless of what they their rally," he sai id. -Michael Lowe KKK Grand Dragon have planned. ^ Lowe said he has sent let ters to almost 200 businesses in the Brazos Valley area and will phone students in dividually in an effort to increase attendance. The rally is scheduled for April 24 at Oaks Park from 1 p.m. It is expected to last for three hours. Lowe said all members of the "white public" are invited to the rally. Old Ag Continued from Page 1 town would take care of us." he said. "Each individual took care of us in their homes. Except when we had our meals on the train. We had a diner, and we took our meals on the train, except for some of the meals which we took with the people outside in the town. But I never was in that cat egory." Connected with the band was an 11-piece orchestra which was paid to furnish music for the two Ctfrps dances each month, accord ing to the "Long Horn," the 1915 A&M student yearbook. Greene played flute in the or chestra. Several larger dances on campus also employed the orches tra to play for them. "Stag dances would be given for two bits (25 cents) a person," he said. "We would go and play for these stag dances until 10:30 p.m., from 8 to 10:30, for two bits a head. Most of that went to the band members, you see. Some times, I would get $5 or $6 for one night. That was a big thing." Upon coming to A&M, Greene said he didn't receive the same amount of freshman treatment that some of the other freshman did because of his age. "I was about 22 or 23," Greene said. I know I was about the age that the seniors were. The seniors seemed to like me. One of the se niors asked me to room with him the end of the first year. "Sometimes I had a dignity," he said. " I guess my age was what it was. It was an advantage that seemed to impress the se niors." In academics, Greene excelled at arithmetic although English tended to give him trouble. "I could do senior and junior arithmetic in my freshman year because I just happened to have that part known, especially multi- lication where everything had to e multiplied out," Greene said. "They didn't have machines or anything like that for calculating. "Out of the last year, I just lacked one grade from making a perfect grade," he said. "I decided a long time before I graduated that the way to graduate and to et good grades was to study the ooks because your examinations covered what was in the books." Greene received his degree in agriculture. "In my last year, they started putting agriculture in high schools. So I applied for agricul tural teaching,' Greene said. "I never did know a darn thing about agriculture. I didn't know a thing about agriculture nor teach ing either. So I took agricultural teaching." After graduation,' Greene taught school at Gatesville. After two years, he decided he had had enough of playing the same recorti to a different group each year, he said. He worked at a reform school the following year before being drafted. "After that, I went into the war (World War I)," he said. "I stayed in that huge massive American war for six months. That was 1918." After the war, Greene entered the oil business. He married and raised two daughters. He current ly resides in San Angelo. Although none of Greene's children or grandchildren en rolled at Texas A&M, a nephew, great-nephew, great-great- nephew and great-great-niece did attend A&M. Under his senior picture in the 1915 "Long Horn," it says of Greene: "Ossie' gets the name of 'Browneyes' from the Glee Club trip, as all the girls asked about the pretty brown-eyed boy in the orchestra. His good looks are far inferior td his talents. He is an ex cellent leader of^men; a clean sportsman, and in his classes, he stands at the top. The only draw back that he has is the short epi taph that he wants on his tomb: 'Here Lies A Man.' We are ex pecting great things of 'Ossie' in the future and know that we shall not be disappointed." Hunger strike Continued from Page 1 prison rather than death as the appropriate punish ment. The U.S. Supreme Court, however, in January up held his death sentence, narrowly ruling Graham could not challenge a now-discarded state law that limited his jury's consideration of youth or family problems as mitigating evidence. Graham said he began his hunger strike on Mon day and would continue it indefinitely. "I will continue on the hunger strike until some type of relief is granted in protest not only to my exe- cution but also to the racism the way the death penalty is carried out here in Texas," he said. "I think it's an issue that needs to be addressed." Of the 372 inmates on death row in Texas, 48 per cent are white, 35 percent black and 16 percent His panic. According to 1991 U.S. Census figures, 66 percent of Texans are white, 23 percent Hispanic and 10 per cent black. J^L-^ ‘ZTutorrrLff zgo-zggo Monday 4/5 Tuesday 4/6 Wednesday 4/7 Thursday 4/8 3pm Chemistry 102 Chapter 21 Chemistry 102 Chapters 21 & 24 Chemistry 102 Chapter 31 Chemistry 102 Test 4 Review 5pm 7pm 9pm Llpm lam Chemistry 101 Chapters 10 & 1 Chemistry 101 Chapter 12 Chemistry 101 Chapter 13 Chemistry 101 Test 4 Review Chemistry 102 Chapter 21 Chemistry 102 Chapters 21 & 24 Chemistry 102 Chapter 31 Chemistry 102 Test 4 Review Physics 218 Chapter 10 Physics 218 Chapter 11 Physics 218 Chapter 12 Physics 218 Test 3 Review Physics 202 Chapter 37 Physics 202 Chapter 38 Physics 202 Test 3 - Review Dr. Kirk 5pm 7pm 9pm llpm lam Math 251 End of Chap. 18 Math 151 End of Chap. 3 Math 251 Part II Math 151 Part II Acct. 229 Review I Acct. 229 Review II Acct. 229 Review III v Acct. 229 Test Review Math 152/161 Chapter 9 Math 142 Chapter 6 Math 151/161 Chapter 10 Math 142 Chapter 7 Math 308 Chapter 5 Part I Meen 212 Chapter 5 Homework Math 308 Chapter 5 Part II For more info, call 260-2660 Tickets will be on sale Sunday, ^4 from 4-6 pm 2